Active tuberculosis in HIV-infected injecting drug users from a low-rate tuberculosis area

1996 
: This article describes the features of active tuberculosis in HIV-infected injecting drug users (IDUs) from a low-rate tuberculosis area. The cohort was followed in a hospital-based HIV/AIDS registry, and data were extracted from the registry, patient charts, and the Tuberculosis Control Program of the Connecticut Health Department. The setting was an acute care inner-city hospital-based health care system, with a high incidence of AIDS, serving a small-to-medium urban area in Connecticut. The patients were 905 HIV-infected IDUs whose time of HIV diagnosis (TOHD) was between 1984 and 1992. The outcome measures were demographics, clinical characteristics, and morbidity rates of active tuberculosis. Of the 27 IDUs who developed active tuberculosis, none were white, all but one were male, and only one was known to have had a positive purified protein derivative (PPD) reaction prior to TOHD: 59% of cases developed in patients known to be HIV infected, 11% occurred in established AIDS patients, and 67% qualified as extrapulmonary tuberculosis (that is, AIDS defining by pre-1993 definitions). In 22% of cases, both Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M. avium-intracellulare were isolated. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was most commonly isolated from a respiratory specimen (67%). The annual incidence rate has been < or = 1.0% since 1988. The cumulative incidence rate was highest for patients with a positive PPD reaction or a history of tuberculosis (1.4 cases/100 patient years; 52 patients; mean follow-up 4.0 years). The demographics and clinical characteristics of active tuberculosis in our HIV-infected IDUs are similar to those described elsewhere in the United States; the morbidity rates are low and stable. The implications of our findings on tuberculosis control in HIV-infected IDUs may be applicable to health care systems with low tuberculosis rates.
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