High-sensitivity C-reactive protein in HIV care: Tuberculosis diagnosis and short-term mortality in a cohort of Kenyan HIV patients in the DREAM programme
Fausto Ciccacci, Benjamin Welu, Harrison Ndoi, Irene Karea, Stefano Orlando, Davide Brambilla, Kenneth Munene, Piero Giglio, et al. (14 authors)
International Journal of Infectious Diseases · 2021-01
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death in HIV-positive people. In Kenya, 140 000 new TB cases occurred in 2019, and 13 000 HIV-positive patients died due to TB. The objective of this study was to investigate the role of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (HS-CRP) in TB diagnosis and the prediction of mortality in HIV-positive patients. METHODS: The IDEA-TB Study enrolled HIV-positive adult patients attending three DREAM centres in Kenya who were suspected of having TB. A lateral flow urine lipoarabinomannan assay (LF-LAM), serum HS-CRP, and GeneXpert MTB/RIF assay (Xpert MTB/RIF) were performed. Six-month survival was evaluated. RESULTS: ), and 477 cells/mL (290-700 cells/mL), respectively. TB was confirmed in 87 (15.2%) patients. Concordance between the Xpert MTB/RIF and LF-LAM tests was 87.1%. HS-CRP was higher in TB patients (35.39 mg/l vs 9.21 mg/l). Malnutrition and elevated HS-CRP were associated with TB: odds ratio (OR) 2.5 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.14-5.72) and OR 6.6 (95% CI 3.87-11.52), respectively. Nine (1.6%) patients died during follow-up. No single factor was associated with mortality. Only the combination of malnutrition and elevated HS-CRP was highly predictive of death (odds ratio (OR) 9.8, 95% CI 1.88-50.95); the association was stronger in TB patients (33.3% vs 1.0%; OR 47.6, 95% CI 7.03-322.23). CONCLUSION: TB diagnosis in HIV-positive patients remains challenging. HS-CRP could play a role in predicting early mortality in symptomatic patients.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Interquartile range
- Tuberculosis
- Odds ratio
- Gastroenterology
- C-reactive protein
- Confidence interval