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TB-HIV INTEGRATION IN THE WORKPLACE

TB-HIV INTEGRATION IN THE WORKPLACE. 2 nd Private Sector Conference on HIV and AIDS Presenter: Dr S Charalambous. Presentation outline. TB burden in HIV-infected individuals WHO TB-HIV collaborative activities 3 Is strategy: Intensive case finding INH preventive therapy Infection control

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TB-HIV INTEGRATION IN THE WORKPLACE

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  1. TB-HIV INTEGRATION IN THE WORKPLACE 2nd Private Sector Conference on HIV and AIDS Presenter: Dr S Charalambous

  2. Presentation outline • TB burden in HIV-infected individuals • WHO TB-HIV collaborative activities • 3 Is strategy: • Intensive case finding • INH preventive therapy • Infection control • ART and TB • Current TB projects

  3. HIV and TB Co-infection • If already TB-infected: HIV increases the risk of developing active TB -10%/lifetime - 10%/yr • If newly TB-infected: more likely to progress to active disease • Taking ART and TB treatment together can be problematic : Side effects, compliance, IRIS • TB presents differently in HIV-infected persons – making diagnosis more difficult • TB is now the leading cause of death among HIV infected persons

  4. WHO 2004 - Key elements of TB-HIV integration • Establish mechanisms for collaboration: • Set up a co-ordinating body for TB/HIV activities effective at all levels • Conduct surveillance of HIV prevalence among tuberculosis patients • Carry out joint TB/HIV planning • Conduct monitoring and evaluation • Decrease the burden of TB in people living with HIV/AIDS • Establish intensified tuberculosis case finding • Introduce isoniazid preventive therapy • Ensure tuberculosis infection control in health care and congregate settings • Decrease the burden of HIV in TB patients: • Provide HIV testing and counselling • Introduce HIV prevention methods • Introduce cotrimoxazole preventive therapy • Ensure HIV/AIDS care and support • Introduce antiretroviral therapy

  5. Key elements of TB-HIV integration • Establish mechanisms for collaboration: • Set up a co-ordinating body for TB/HIV activities effective at all levels • Conduct surveillance of HIV prevalence among tuberculosis patients • Carry out joint TB/HIV planning • Conduct monitoring and evaluation • Decrease the burden of TB in people living with HIV/AIDS • Establish intensified tuberculosis case finding • Introduce isoniazid preventive therapy • Ensure tuberculosis infection control in health care and congregate settings • Decrease the burden of HIV in TB patients: • Provide HIV testing and counselling • Introduce HIV prevention methods • Introduce cotrimoxazole preventive therapy • Ensure HIV/AIDS care and support • Introduce antiretroviral therapy

  6. Intensive case finding • Community-based ART programme in Cape Town* • active screening for TB prior to ART (2002-2005) • 477/923 (52%) previous TB at enrolment • 238/923 (25%) active TB at enrolment (>50% already on TB Rx) • Home-based ART programme in Uganda** • Active screening for TB prior to ART (2003-2005) • 75/1044 (7.2%) active TB at baseline (50% already on TB Rx) * Lawn AIDS 2006 **Moore AIDS 2007

  7. SA National ART guidelines 2004 • Prior to initiating ART • Suspect TB if 2 or more of: • Observed weight loss ≥ 1.5 kg • Cough > 2 weeks • Night sweats > 2 weeks • Fever > 2 weeks • 2 sputum specimens (2 AFB, 1 culture) • Prior to IPT • As above, but investigate if 1 or more symptom • 2 sputum AFB, 1 sputum culture

  8. Screening for TB prior to ART initiation in community and industrial programme settings in South Africa Yasmeen Hanifa • Objectives: • Describe current practice in screening for TB among patients attending industrial and community HIV care programmes prior to ART initiation • Assess adherence to national guidelines on investigation and screening for TB suspects

  9. Results: symptom screen and sputum investigation † any of: cough / sputum production/ fever / night sweats / weight loss; ‡ two or more of: cough / fever / night sweats / weight loss

  10. Conclusions • Screening for TB / adherence to national guidelines, or its documentation, or both, were poor • Offer investigations on site, free of charge • Clinical data systems should facilitate care by prompting care providers to screen for TB

  11. Isoniazid Preventive therapy • Recommended by WHO since 2005 • All HIV infected persons with no previous history of TB regardless of CD4 count for period of 6 months • Persons with silicosis • Given as a once-daily dose • Need to exclude TB prior to use

  12. Efficacy of primary isoniazid TB preventive therapy (IPT)

  13. IPT & drug resistance • Systematic review of published data since 1951 • 13 studies, On IPT = 18095, controls = 17,985 • Summary RR of resistance • 1.45 (95% CI 0.85 – 2.47) • Results similar when stratified by HIV • Findings do not exclude an increased risk of isoniazid-resistant TB after IPT • Surveillance for isoniazid resistance is required (Balcells ME, Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2006)

  14. ART & TB incidence WHO 1&2 (Badri, Lancet. 2002)

  15. Antiretroviral therapy and TB incidence in South African Platinum miners Mean estimate & 95% CI

  16. Kaplan Meier graph of TB incidence on patients started on ART by CD4 count at start of ART

  17. Results: Univariate and Multivariate analysis of baseline characteristics associated with TB incidence in patients who are on ART PT = linear test for trend

  18. Results: Univariate and Multivariate analysis of time-dependent factors associated with TB incidence in patients who are on ART PT = linear test for trend

  19. THRio Cohort: HAART initiation after TB diagnosis improves survival Retrospective, observational cohort of 662 HAART-naive patients diagnosed with TB in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil By HAART Exposure By CD4+ Count Category 1.0 1.0 ≥ 200 cells/mm3 HAART < 200 cells/mm3 No HAART 0.9 0.9 Proportion Surviving Proportion Surviving 0.8 0.8 P < .001 P = .985 0.7 0.7 0 1000 0 1000 500 1500 500 1500 Days Days Saraceni V, et al. IAC 2008. Abstract MOAB0305.

  20. TB PROJECTS • Cluster randomised trial in gold miners • All miners offered TB Preventive Therapy for 9 months • Funded by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation • Over 16000 miners already on INH COLLABORATORS London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Johns Hopkins University AngloGold Ashanti Gold Fields Harmony Gold Department of Minerals and Energy Department of Health Department of Labour Mining Unions and Associations

  21. Conclusions • Back to basics! • TB case finding, INH Prevention, Infection control • ARV reduces TB incidence in HIV patients but still very high • Lets not forget the health workers - efforts to protect them need to be implemented.

  22. Aurum Institute for Health Research Prof. G J Churchyard Dr Dave Clark Dr C Morris Dr C Innes Dr M Shisana Dr L Pemba Mr T Puso Mr S Senoge Mr M Eisenstein Presentations used Shaheen Mehtar Steve Lawn Kevin De Cock London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Dr K Fielding Dr A Grant Funders Anglo Coal Anglo Platinum PEPFAR Anglo American Acknowledgments

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