A study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of COVID-19; a systematic review study

Introduction: Studies on COVID-19 disease in patients with tuberculosis (TB) have not yet been widely performed and clear results have not been presented. It was found that; COVID-19 infection in TB patients quickly leads to disease and causes death in a small number of them. However, the prognosis...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abuzar Shirazi, Nasrin Moradi, Bahareh Behzadi, Masoumeh Sadat Mousavi, Sadeq Hosseinpour, Ebrahim Moayedi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society of Diabetic Nephropathy Prevention 2021-07-01
Series:Journal of Preventive Epidemiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jprevepi.com/PDF/jpe-6-e35.pdf
id doaj-78cfec1c6159467d9a3303857c2c6797
record_format Article
spelling doaj-78cfec1c6159467d9a3303857c2c67972021-09-14T17:06:18ZengSociety of Diabetic Nephropathy PreventionJournal of Preventive Epidemiology2476-39342021-07-0162e35e3510.34172/jpe.2021.35jpe-22157A study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of COVID-19; a systematic review studyAbuzar Shirazi0Nasrin Moradi1Bahareh Behzadi2Masoumeh Sadat Mousavi3Sadeq Hosseinpour4Ebrahim Moayedi5Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences, Shahrekord, IranPhD Student, School of Medical Management and information, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IranDepartment of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Medical School, Rafsanjan University of Medical Sciences, Rafsanjan, IranModeling in Health Research Center, Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences, Shahrekord, Iran.Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences, Shahrekord, IranDepartment of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences, Shahrekord, IranIntroduction: Studies on COVID-19 disease in patients with tuberculosis (TB) have not yet been widely performed and clear results have not been presented. It was found that; COVID-19 infection in TB patients quickly leads to disease and causes death in a small number of them. However, the prognosis of co-infection has not been evaluated in long run, since the association between TB and covid-19 cannot be ruled out, and therefore appropriate precautions and health system preparation are needed to deal with the impending burden of co-infection. The aim of this study was to provide a clear picture of the effects of these two diseases with each other. Methods: This study is considered as a systematic review of secondary studies. The statistical population is the studies that have been conducted in relation to the above topic and in the world. These articles were extracted from the databases of PubMed, Magiran, Science Direct, and Google Scholar. Out of 180 articles, 52 articles were related to our subject were selected, while 30 duplicates were removed from this number, hence 30 articles were selected. Finally, after a qualitative review, 12 articles were included in the study and the results of five articles were analyzed. Results: Studies have shown that co-infection with COVID-19 and tuberculosis can increase mortality; TB is also likely to exacerbate the course of COVID-19 for the infected population and may increase the TB epidemic in the short term after the end of the COVID-19 epidemic is effective, so appropriate precautions and preparation of the health system are needed to deal with the impending burden of co-infection. Conclusion: COVID-19 disease and its limitations may have a significant impact on the presentation and monitoring of TB control strategies nationally and globally. Concerns about delays in treating TB patients make their disease worse, and therefore broader management should be conducted.https://jprevepi.com/PDF/jpe-6-e35.pdfcovid- 19tuberculosissystematic reviewmycobacterium tuberculosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abuzar Shirazi
Nasrin Moradi
Bahareh Behzadi
Masoumeh Sadat Mousavi
Sadeq Hosseinpour
Ebrahim Moayedi
spellingShingle Abuzar Shirazi
Nasrin Moradi
Bahareh Behzadi
Masoumeh Sadat Mousavi
Sadeq Hosseinpour
Ebrahim Moayedi
A study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of COVID-19; a systematic review study
Journal of Preventive Epidemiology
covid- 19
tuberculosis
systematic review
mycobacterium tuberculosis
author_facet Abuzar Shirazi
Nasrin Moradi
Bahareh Behzadi
Masoumeh Sadat Mousavi
Sadeq Hosseinpour
Ebrahim Moayedi
author_sort Abuzar Shirazi
title A study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of COVID-19; a systematic review study
title_short A study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of COVID-19; a systematic review study
title_full A study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of COVID-19; a systematic review study
title_fullStr A study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of COVID-19; a systematic review study
title_full_unstemmed A study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of COVID-19; a systematic review study
title_sort study of the relationship between tuberculosis disease and the severity of covid-19; a systematic review study
publisher Society of Diabetic Nephropathy Prevention
series Journal of Preventive Epidemiology
issn 2476-3934
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Introduction: Studies on COVID-19 disease in patients with tuberculosis (TB) have not yet been widely performed and clear results have not been presented. It was found that; COVID-19 infection in TB patients quickly leads to disease and causes death in a small number of them. However, the prognosis of co-infection has not been evaluated in long run, since the association between TB and covid-19 cannot be ruled out, and therefore appropriate precautions and health system preparation are needed to deal with the impending burden of co-infection. The aim of this study was to provide a clear picture of the effects of these two diseases with each other. Methods: This study is considered as a systematic review of secondary studies. The statistical population is the studies that have been conducted in relation to the above topic and in the world. These articles were extracted from the databases of PubMed, Magiran, Science Direct, and Google Scholar. Out of 180 articles, 52 articles were related to our subject were selected, while 30 duplicates were removed from this number, hence 30 articles were selected. Finally, after a qualitative review, 12 articles were included in the study and the results of five articles were analyzed. Results: Studies have shown that co-infection with COVID-19 and tuberculosis can increase mortality; TB is also likely to exacerbate the course of COVID-19 for the infected population and may increase the TB epidemic in the short term after the end of the COVID-19 epidemic is effective, so appropriate precautions and preparation of the health system are needed to deal with the impending burden of co-infection. Conclusion: COVID-19 disease and its limitations may have a significant impact on the presentation and monitoring of TB control strategies nationally and globally. Concerns about delays in treating TB patients make their disease worse, and therefore broader management should be conducted.
topic covid- 19
tuberculosis
systematic review
mycobacterium tuberculosis
url https://jprevepi.com/PDF/jpe-6-e35.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT abuzarshirazi astudyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT nasrinmoradi astudyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT baharehbehzadi astudyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT masoumehsadatmousavi astudyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT sadeqhosseinpour astudyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT ebrahimmoayedi astudyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT abuzarshirazi studyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT nasrinmoradi studyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT baharehbehzadi studyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT masoumehsadatmousavi studyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT sadeqhosseinpour studyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
AT ebrahimmoayedi studyoftherelationshipbetweentuberculosisdiseaseandtheseverityofcovid19asystematicreviewstudy
_version_ 1717379658341679104