Prevalence and mortality of tuberculosis at HIV diagnosis in Spain, 2004-2024.
Roser Navarro-Soler, Alfonso Muriel, Rocío Montejano, José I Bernardino, Félix Gutiérrez, Ana Del Amo-de Palacios, Borja M Fernández Felix, Marta González-Sanz, et al. (16 authors)
International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases · 2026-06
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis coinfection at HIV diagnosis drives early morbidity and mortality. We estimated tuberculosis prevalence at HIV diagnosis over two decades in a Spanish cohort and quantified its determinants and outcomes.
METHODS: We analyzed 19,058 ART-naive adults in CoRIS (2004-2024). Prevalent tuberculosis was defined as a disease diagnosed from the date of HIV diagnosis up to 6 months after ART initiation. Predictors were identified using multivariable logistic regression; mortality was assessed using Kaplan-Meier and competing-risk methods.
RESULTS: Prevalence was 2.2% (426/19,058), declining from 4.9% (2004-2008) to 0.8% (2019-2024), an 83% reduction (P < 0.001). Despite this decline, affected individuals presented with increasingly advanced immunosuppression. Strong independent predictors included geographical origin (Sub-Saharan Africa OR = 4.3; Latin America OR = 1.6), positive TB screening (OR = 7.5), viral load >1,000,000 copies/ml (OR = 2.9), injection drug use (OR = 2.9), and age ≥50 years (OR = 6.7), whereas university education (OR = 0.3) and CD4 ≥500 cells/µl (OR = 0.5) were protective. Model discrimination was good (AUC = 0.84). Mortality was higher with tuberculosis (15.0% vs 4.1%; RR = 3.6; 5-year survival 87% vs 97%).
CONCLUSIONS: Although prevalence has declined substantially, tuberculosis at HIV diagnosis remains concentrated in high-risk groups and confers excess mortality. Targeted screening and prompt ART remain essential, particularly for migrants from high-burden regions.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Spain
- HIV Infections
- Male
- Female
- Prevalence
- Adult
- Tuberculosis
- Middle Aged
- Coinfection
- Risk Factors
- Young Adult
- Viral Load