Adverse events and treatment interruption in tuberculosis patients with and without HIV co-infection
- R A M Breen1,
- R F Miller2,
- T Gorsuch3,
- C J Smith2,
- A Schwenk3,
- W Holmes1,
- J Ballinger1,
- L Swaden1,
- M A Johnson1,
- I Cropley1,
- M C I Lipman1
- 1Department of HIV Medicine, Royal Free Hospital, London, UK
- 2Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, Royal Free and University College Medical School, London, UK
- 3Department of HIV Medicine, North Middlesex Hospital, London, UK
- Correspondence to:
Dr R A M Breen
Department of Thoracic and HIV Medicine, Royal Free Hospital, London NW3 2QG, UK; r.breen{at}medsch.ucl.ac.uk
- Received 18 January 2006
- Accepted 7 June 2006
- Published Online First 14 July 2006
Abstract
Background: Serious treatment associated adverse events are thought to occur more frequently in individuals with tuberculosis (TB) who are co-infected with HIV. A study was undertaken to assess the frequency of serious (grade III/IV) adverse events and interruption of anti-TB treatment in the era of effective antiretroviral therapy.
Methods: The incidence of serious adverse events was retrospectively compared in 312 individuals treated for TB, 156 of whom were co-infected with HIV.
Results: 111 HIV infected individuals (71%) received highly active antiretroviral therapy at the same time as anti-TB treatment. Serious adverse events were recorded in 40% HIV infected and 26% HIV uninfected individuals (p = 0.008). Peripheral neuropathy and persistent vomiting were more common in co-infected patients (p<0.001; p = 0.006), although all cause interruption of anti-TB treatment occurred with similar frequency in the two groups (13% in HIV infected patients and 15% in HIV uninfected patients; p = 0.74). In 85% of HIV infected patients and 87% of HIV uninfected individuals this was due to hepatotoxicity, which typically presented within 2 months of starting treatment. The median delay in restarting treatment was 4 weeks, so most individuals required full TB re-treatment.
Conclusion: Despite a greater rate of serious (grade III/IV) adverse events among HIV infected individuals, discontinuation of anti-TB treatment occurred with a similar frequency in HIV infected and HIV uninfected individuals.
- HAART, highly active antiretroviral therapy
- NRTI, nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
- NNRTI, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
- PI, protease inhibitor
- TB, tuberculosis
Footnotes
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Published Online First 14 July 2006
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Funding: none.
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Competing interests: none declared.









