From the publishers of The New England Journal of Medicine

Save time and stay informed. Our physician-editors offer you clinical perspectives on key research and news.

  1. Home>
  2. Specialties>
  3. HIV/AIDS Clinical Care>
  4. Summary and Comment

TB Recurrence: Reinfection or Relapse?

Recurrences after successful TB treatment are more common among HIV-positive than HIV-negative patients, and the reasons are different: About half the recurrences in HIV-positive patients represent reinfection rather than reactivation.

Worldwide, tuberculosis (TB) is the most common opportunistic infection (OI) among HIV-positive patients. In regions with a high prevalence of this disease, recurrence is not uncommon among HIV-positive patients, even if they successfully complete TB treatment. Do these recurrences represent relapse or reinfection?

Investigators conducted a population-based study in rural Malawi between 1995 and 2003, when antiretroviral therapy (ART) was not yet available, the prevalence of HIV infection was 14%, and the annual incidence of smear-positive pulmonary TB was 100 cases per 100,000 adults. During the study period, 1287 cases of culture-confirmed TB (mostly pulmonary) occurred: 510 among HIV-positive people, 270 among HIV-negative people, and 507 among people with unknown HIV status. Twenty-one percent of the HIV-positive patients died before TB treatment was completed, versus 4% of the HIV-negative patients.

Among the patients who completed treatment, there were 88 clinically diagnosed recurrences of TB. The recurrence rate was higher among HIV-positive than HIV-negative patients. Fifty-three of the recurrences (31 among people with HIV infection and 22 among those without) were confirmed by culture. DNA fingerprinting on mycobacterial isolates from 39 culture-confirmed episodes revealed that 12 of 23 recurrences among HIV-positive patients represented reinfection, compared with only 1 of 16 among HIV-negative patients. Overall, the rate of reinfection was much higher for HIV-positive than for HIV-negative patients (2.2 vs. 0.4 per 100 person-years); the rate of relapse did not differ between the groups.

Comment: In this high-prevalence setting, reinfection was responsible for about half the culture-confirmed TB recurrences among HIV-positive patients, versus <10% of those among HIV-negative patients. The other important finding is that HIV-positive patients who develop active TB have a high mortality rate despite receiving appropriate TB treatment. Although not entirely surprising, these results underscore the fact that immunosuppression is the major factor underlying morbidity and mortality from TB and that HIV-positive patients with TB coinfection should receive ART to improve their immunologic status. At the end of the day, ART is the best prophylaxis for OIs.

Carlos del Rio, MD

Published in Journal Watch HIV/AIDS Clinical Care February 1, 2010

Citation(s):

Crampin AC et al. Recurrent TB: Relapse or reinfection? The effect of HIV in a general population cohort in Malawi. AIDS 2010 Jan 28; 24:417.

Your Remark:

Reader Remarks are intended to encourage lively discussion of clinical topics with your peers in the medical community. Please consider this when composing your remark.

Fields marked with an * are required.

Name as you'd like it to appear:

Submitting a comment indicates you have read and agreed to the remark guidelines and declare:*

PRIVACY: We will not use your email address, submitted for a comment, for any other purpose nor sell, rent, or share your e-mail address with any third parties. Please see our Privacy Policy.

 

CLEAR erases anything you've added in any part of the form. CONTINUE allows you to check your entire post (and edit it if necessary) before submitting.

To ensure that your Reader Remark is not formatted as one long paragraph, precede new paragraphs with either a blank line or an indentation.

Search

Advanced

Article Tools

Reader Remarks

Sign-In

Forgot your password?

New to Journal Watch?

E-mail Alerts

Delivered to your inbox.
Tailored to your interests. Free.

Sign Up Now!

Journal Watch Newsletters

Available in 13 specialties with convenient delivery and 10 free online CME exams.

Subscribe Now!

Copyright © 2010. Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.