Tuberculosis HIV Co-infection: Epidemiological, Clinical, Therapeutic and Evolutionary Profile of Patients Hospitalized in the Befelatanana Infectious Diseases Department
J. Ratomaharo, Njaratiana Ravololomanana, V. Andriananja, Sedera Aurélien Mioramalala, M. Randriantahiry, R. Andriamihaja, Rivo Andry Rakotoarivelo, Mamy Jean de Dieu Randria
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine · 2025-05
Abstract
Abstract Introduction Tuberculosis and HIV-AIDS co-infection (TB-HIV) form a deadly pair. Tuberculosis remains the most frequent opportunistic infection in HIV-positive subjects in many developing countries. Our aim is to describe TB-HIV co-infection in Madagascar. Methods This was a retrospective, descriptive cross-sectional study from January, 2020 to December, 2023. Consecutive patients hospitalized with HIV and a diagnosis of active TB were included. Results We identified 122 cases (35.4%) of TB-HIV co-infection out of a total 345 hospitalized patients with HIV; 78.7% were new cases. The mean age was 34.5 yrs (range 18-69), 73% were male, 19.7% were commercial sex workers and 36.9% had multiple sexual partners. Concurrent opportunistic infections were common and included: pneumocystis pneumonia (49.2%), oropharyngeal candidiasis (38.6%), bacterial pneumonia (21.3%), cerebral toxoplasmosis (2.5%) and cryptococcosis (4.9%). CD4 count was < 200 cells/mm³ in 96.3% of patients. Mortality was 21.5%. In multivariate analysis, predictors of mortality were CD4 < 200 cells/mm3(p=0.01), anemia (p=0,001) and the presence of concomitant opportunistic infection (p=0,0045). Conclusion TB-HIVco-infection is a leading cause of hospitalization in patients with HIV in Madagascar and is associated with high mortality. Concurrent opportunistic infection is common. Anemia, CD4 < 200 cells/mm³ and concurrent opportunistic infections are associated with increased risk for mortality.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Epidemiology
- Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- Intensive care medicine