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      Human immunodeficiency virus type-1 infection in Zambian children with tuberculosis: changing seroprevalence and evaluation of a thioacetazone-free regimen.

      Tubercle and lung disease : the official journal of the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease
      Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Drug Hypersensitivity, Drug Therapy, Combination, therapeutic use, Female, HIV Infections, complications, HIV Seroprevalence, trends, HIV-1, Humans, Infant, Isoniazid, Male, Prospective Studies, Pyrazinamide, Rifampin, Streptomycin, Treatment Outcome, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary, drug therapy, epidemiology, Zambia

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          Abstract

          This study was conducted at the Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, University Teaching Hospital (UTH), in Lusaka, Zambia. To monitor the seroprevalence of HIV type-1 in children with tuberculosis and to evaluate the response to anti-tuberculosis therapy using a thioacetazone-free treatment regimen. A prospective cross-sectional study of all consecutive newly diagnosed cases of TB in children from 1 month-15 years of age seen at the University Teaching Hospital (UTH) in Lusaka, Zambia between 1 October 1991 and 31 May 1992. 120 children with a clinical diagnosis of tuberculosis and 167 controls were enrolled in the study. The overall HIV type-1 seroprevalence rate in children with tuberculosis was 55.8% (67/120) compared to 9.6% (16/167) amongst the control group (P < 0.0001: odds ratio = 11.50; 95% CI = 5.99-22.7). Common clinical presentations among children with TB were bronchopneumonia (45/162), miliary TB (30/162) and tuberculous lymphadenopathy (21/33). There were no significant differences in clinical presentation of TB between the HIV-negative and HIV-positive groups. The follow-up of those patients with tuberculosis was poor, with only 65 patients (55%) returning to the clinic for scheduled appointments after discharge. All the 16 patients who died did so within 60 days of discharge from hospital; all of them were seropositive for HIV. There were no deaths among the HIV-negative group. Despite the exclusion of thioacetazone from the treatment regimen, cutaneous reactions occurring within 8 weeks of commencing treatment were observed in 7 of the 65 (11%) patients, 2 of whom developed fatal Stevens-Johnson syndrome. All 7 patients were seropositive for HIV-1. The seroprevalence rate of HIV type-1 among children with tuberculosis in Lusaka continues to rise; careful monitoring of anti-TB therapy (even in regimens excluding thioacetazone) for potentially lethal side effects should be carried out.

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