Patients hospitalized with active tuberculosis and Covid-19 coinfection: A matched case-control from the Brazilian Covid-19 Registry
Carvalho RLR, Aguiar GG, Moreira JFB, Pereira DN, Augusto VM, Schwarzbold AV, Matos CC, Rios DRA, et al. (18 authors)
Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias · 2024-04
Abstract
Although control of Covid-19 has improved, the virus continues to cause infections, such as tuberculosis, that is still endemic in many countries, representing a scenario of coinfection. To compare Covid-19 clinical manifestations and outcomes between patients with active tuberculosis infection and matched controls. This is a matched case-control study based on data from the Brazilian Covid-19 Registry, in hospitalized patients aged 18 or over with laboratory confirmed Covid-19 from March 1, 2020, to March 31, 2022. Cases were patients with tuberculosis and controls were Covid-19 patients without tuberculosis. From 13,636 Covid-19, 36 also had active tuberculosis (0.0026%). Pulmonary fibrosis (5.6% vs 0.0%), illicit drug abuse (30.6% vs 3.0%), alcoholism (33.3% vs 11.9%) and smoking (50.0% vs 9.7%) were more common among patients with tuberculosis. They also had a higher frequency of nausea and vomiting (25.0% vs 10.4%). There were no significant differences in in-hospital mortality, mechanical ventilation, need for dialysis and ICU stay. Patients with TB infection presented a higher frequency of pulmonary fibrosis, abuse of illicit drugs, alcoholism, current smoking, symptoms of nausea and vomiting. The outcomes were similar between them.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Tuberculosis
- Pneumonia, Viral
- Coronavirus Infections
- Hospitalization
- Registries
- Hospital Mortality
- Case-Control Studies
- Adult
- Aged
- Middle Aged
- Brazil
- Female
- Male
- Pandemics
- Coinfection
- Betacoronavirus
- COVID-19
- SARS-CoV-2