Beyond the Lungs: Cardiovascular Risk in COPD Patients with a History of Tuberculosis-A Narrative Review.
Ramona Cioboata, Mihai Olteanu, Denisa Maria Mitroi, Simona-Maria Roșu, Maria-Loredana Tieranu, Silviu Gabriel Vlasceanu, Simona Daniela Neamtu, Eugen Nicolae Tieranu, et al. (10 authors)
Journal of clinical medicine · 2026-01
Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and tuberculosis (TB) increasingly co-occur in low- and middle-income countries and aging populations. Prior pulmonary TB is a robust, smoking-independent determinant of COPD and is linked to persistent systemic inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, dyslipidemia, and hypercoagulability axes that also amplify cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. We conducted a targeted narrative non-systematic review (2005-2025) of PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science, selecting studies for clinical relevance across epidemiology, clinical phenotypes, pathobiology, biomarkers, risk scores, sleep-disordered breathing, and management. No quantitative synthesis or formal risk-of-bias assessment was performed. Accordingly, findings should be interpreted as a qualitative synthesis rather than pooled estimates. Prior TB is associated with a distinctive COPD phenotype characterized by mixed obstructive-restrictive defects, reduced diffusing capacity (DLCO), radiographic sequelae, and higher exacerbation/hospitalization burden. Mechanistic insights: Convergent mechanisms chronic immune activation, endothelial injury, prothrombotic remodeling, molecular mimicry, and epigenetic reprogramming provide biologic plausibility for excess CVD, venous thromboembolism, and pulmonary hypertension. Multimarker panels spanning inflammation, endothelial injury, myocardial strain/fibrosis, and coagulation offer incremental prognostic value beyond clinical variables. While QRISK4 now includes COPD, it does not explicitly model prior TB or COPD-TB outcomes, but data specific to post-TB cohorts remain limited. Clinical implications: In resource-constrained settings, pragmatic screening, prioritized PAP access, guideline-concordant pharmacotherapy, and task-shifting are feasible adaptations. A history of TB is a clinically meaningful modifier of cardiopulmonary risk in COPD. An integrated, multimodal assessment history, targeted biomarkers, spirometry/lung volumes, DLCO, 6 min walk test, and focused imaging should guide individualized care while TB-aware prediction models and implementation studies are developed and validated in high-burden settings.