The prevalence of HIV among adults with pulmonary TB at a population level in Zambia

Abstract Background Tuberculosis and HIV co-infection is one of the main drivers of poor outcome for both diseases in Zambia. HIV infection has been found to predict TB infection/disease and TB has been reported as a major cause of death among individuals with HIV. Improving case detection of TB/HIV...

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Main Authors: Pascalina Chanda-Kapata, Nathan Kapata, Eveline Klinkenberg, Martin P. Grobusch, Frank Cobelens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-03-01
Series:BMC Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2345-5
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spelling doaj-fc5789da3410406398c52a81b09b8f562020-11-25T03:57:33ZengBMCBMC Infectious Diseases1471-23342017-03-011711610.1186/s12879-017-2345-5The prevalence of HIV among adults with pulmonary TB at a population level in ZambiaPascalina Chanda-Kapata0Nathan Kapata1Eveline Klinkenberg2Martin P. Grobusch3Frank Cobelens4Department of Disease Surveillance and Research, Ministry of HealthDepartment of Disease Surveillance and Research, Ministry of HealthKNCV Tuberculosis FoundationCenter of Tropical Medicine and Travel Medicine, Department of Infectious Diseases, Division of Internal Medicine, Academic Medical Center, University of AmsterdamKNCV Tuberculosis FoundationAbstract Background Tuberculosis and HIV co-infection is one of the main drivers of poor outcome for both diseases in Zambia. HIV infection has been found to predict TB infection/disease and TB has been reported as a major cause of death among individuals with HIV. Improving case detection of TB/HIV co-infection has the potential to lead to early treatment of both conditions and can impact positively on treatment outcomes. This study was conducted in order to determine the HIV prevalence among adults with tuberculosis in a national prevalence survey setting in Zambia, 2013–2014. Methods A countrywide cross sectional survey was conducted in 2013/2014 using stratified cluster sampling, proportional to population size for rural and urban populations. Each of the 66 countrywide clusters represented one census supervisory area with cluster size averaging 825 individuals. Socio-demographic characteristics were collected during a household visit by trained survey staff. A standard symptom-screening questionnaire was administered to 46,099 eligible individuals across all clusters, followed by chest x-ray reading for all eligible. Those symptomatic or with x-ray abnormalities were confirmed or ruled out as TB case by either liquid culture or Xpert MTBRif performed at the three central reference laboratories. HIV testing was offered to all participants at the survey site following the national testing algorithm with rapid tests. The prevalence was expressed as the proportion of HIV among TB cases with 95% confidence limits. Results A total of 265/6123 (4.3%) participants were confirmed of having tuberculosis. Thirty-six of 151 TB survey cases who accepted HIV testing were HIV-seropositive (23.8%; 95% CI 17.2–31.4). The mean age of the TB/HIV cases was 37.6 years (range 24–70). The majority of the TB/HIV cases had some chest x-ray abnormality (88.9%); were smear positive (50.0%), and/or had a positive culture result (94.4%). None of the 36 detected TB/HIV cases were already on TB treatment, and 5/36 (13.9%) had a previous history of TB treatment. The proportion of TB/HIV was higher in urban than in the rural clusters. The HIV status was unknown for 114/265 (43.0%) of the TB cases. Conclusions The TB/HIV prevalence in the general population was found to be lower than what is routinely reported as incident TB/HIV cases at facility level. However; the TB/HIV co-infection was higher in areas with higher TB prevalence. Innovative and effective strategies for ensuring TB/HIV co-infected individuals are detected and treated early are required.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2345-5TuberculosisPopulationHIV-TB co-morbidity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pascalina Chanda-Kapata
Nathan Kapata
Eveline Klinkenberg
Martin P. Grobusch
Frank Cobelens
spellingShingle Pascalina Chanda-Kapata
Nathan Kapata
Eveline Klinkenberg
Martin P. Grobusch
Frank Cobelens
The prevalence of HIV among adults with pulmonary TB at a population level in Zambia
BMC Infectious Diseases
Tuberculosis
Population
HIV-TB co-morbidity
author_facet Pascalina Chanda-Kapata
Nathan Kapata
Eveline Klinkenberg
Martin P. Grobusch
Frank Cobelens
author_sort Pascalina Chanda-Kapata
title The prevalence of HIV among adults with pulmonary TB at a population level in Zambia
title_short The prevalence of HIV among adults with pulmonary TB at a population level in Zambia
title_full The prevalence of HIV among adults with pulmonary TB at a population level in Zambia
title_fullStr The prevalence of HIV among adults with pulmonary TB at a population level in Zambia
title_full_unstemmed The prevalence of HIV among adults with pulmonary TB at a population level in Zambia
title_sort prevalence of hiv among adults with pulmonary tb at a population level in zambia
publisher BMC
series BMC Infectious Diseases
issn 1471-2334
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Abstract Background Tuberculosis and HIV co-infection is one of the main drivers of poor outcome for both diseases in Zambia. HIV infection has been found to predict TB infection/disease and TB has been reported as a major cause of death among individuals with HIV. Improving case detection of TB/HIV co-infection has the potential to lead to early treatment of both conditions and can impact positively on treatment outcomes. This study was conducted in order to determine the HIV prevalence among adults with tuberculosis in a national prevalence survey setting in Zambia, 2013–2014. Methods A countrywide cross sectional survey was conducted in 2013/2014 using stratified cluster sampling, proportional to population size for rural and urban populations. Each of the 66 countrywide clusters represented one census supervisory area with cluster size averaging 825 individuals. Socio-demographic characteristics were collected during a household visit by trained survey staff. A standard symptom-screening questionnaire was administered to 46,099 eligible individuals across all clusters, followed by chest x-ray reading for all eligible. Those symptomatic or with x-ray abnormalities were confirmed or ruled out as TB case by either liquid culture or Xpert MTBRif performed at the three central reference laboratories. HIV testing was offered to all participants at the survey site following the national testing algorithm with rapid tests. The prevalence was expressed as the proportion of HIV among TB cases with 95% confidence limits. Results A total of 265/6123 (4.3%) participants were confirmed of having tuberculosis. Thirty-six of 151 TB survey cases who accepted HIV testing were HIV-seropositive (23.8%; 95% CI 17.2–31.4). The mean age of the TB/HIV cases was 37.6 years (range 24–70). The majority of the TB/HIV cases had some chest x-ray abnormality (88.9%); were smear positive (50.0%), and/or had a positive culture result (94.4%). None of the 36 detected TB/HIV cases were already on TB treatment, and 5/36 (13.9%) had a previous history of TB treatment. The proportion of TB/HIV was higher in urban than in the rural clusters. The HIV status was unknown for 114/265 (43.0%) of the TB cases. Conclusions The TB/HIV prevalence in the general population was found to be lower than what is routinely reported as incident TB/HIV cases at facility level. However; the TB/HIV co-infection was higher in areas with higher TB prevalence. Innovative and effective strategies for ensuring TB/HIV co-infected individuals are detected and treated early are required.
topic Tuberculosis
Population
HIV-TB co-morbidity
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-017-2345-5
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