Long-term risk of death after tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment
Thiago Cerqueira-Silva, Viviane Boaventura, Enny S. Paixão, Mauro Niskier Sanchez, Clémence Leyrat, Otávio T. Ranzani, Maurício L. Barreto, Júlia Moreira Pescarini
Nature Medicine · 2026-03
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major societal burden, yet data on long-term mortality following TB diagnosis and treatment are limited. We conducted a nationwide Brazilian cohort study using linked data (2004-2018) to quantify long-term mortality (up to 14 years) following TB. We matched: (i) individuals diagnosed with TB or (ii) individuals who had completed TB treatment to TB-free individuals. We used competing risk methods to analyze natural causes (that is, defined as deaths excluding TB, HIV and external causes) and cause-specific mortality. In the diagnosed cohort (185,921 pairs), the risk of 14-year natural cause mortality was significantly higher (risk ratio (RR) = 2.16, 95% confidence interval = 1.96-2.37); RRs were significantly elevated for deaths due to cancer, cardiovascular, endocrine, respiratory and external causes. The treated cohort (111,871 pairs) presented elevated natural cause mortality risk (RR = 1.77,1.55-2.03), with similarly increased RRs across specific causes. We showed that TB survivors, even after treatment, faced a significantly elevated, prolonged risk of death from various causes up to 14 years later. This finding highlights the need for long-term monitoring to reduce the burden of TB.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Cohort
- Tuberculosis
- Relative risk
- Confidence interval
- Cohort study
- Cause of death
- Risk of mortality
- Natural history
- Mortality rate
- Pediatrics
- Internal medicine
- Risk assessment
- Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- Disease
- Respiratory system
- Natural death
- Retrospective cohort study
- Intensive care medicine