1 / 14

THRio Objectives

Impact of tuberculosis screening and isoniazid preventive therapy on incidence of TB and death in the TB/HIV in Rio de Janeiro (THRio) study. B. Durovni 1,2 , V. Saraceni 1 , A. Pacheco 3 , S. Cavalcante 1,3 , S. Cohn 4 , B. King 4 , L. Moulton 4 , R. Chaisson 4 , J. Golub 4 , THRio study group

megan
Download Presentation

THRio Objectives

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Impact of tuberculosis screening and isoniazid preventive therapy on incidence of TB and death in the TB/HIV in Rio de Janeiro (THRio) study B. Durovni1,2, V. Saraceni1, A. Pacheco3, S. Cavalcante1,3, S. Cohn4, B. King4, L. Moulton4, R. Chaisson4, J. Golub4, THRio study group 1Rio de Janeiro City Health Secretariat, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 2Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 3Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 4Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, United States

  2. THRio Objectives • To determine if implementation of a policy of widespread use of isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT) in HIV-infected patients with access to ARV therapy reduces the incidence of active TB and death in the HIV clinic population • Scale up of tuberculin skin testing (TST) and IPT among HIV-infected patients in public primary health units in Rio de Janeiro within the current HIV clinic infrastructure • In an effort to reduce: • TB Incidence • Mortality

  3. THRio Study Design and TimelineCluster-Randomized, Step-Wedge Trial Intervention and Follow-up Period (for all clinics) 48 60 Aug 09 Sep 05 Jan 08 4

  4. Intervention Training clinics to properly implement TB screening and adhere to TST/IPT policy for all HIV-infected patients TST to be done for all eligible clinic patients No prior TB history No prior IPT No prior +TST IPT x 6 months for all TST+ without active TB and all contacts of active TB cases 5

  5. TST and IPT • 69% had at least one TST placed and read • 83% started IPT • 0.84% had an adverse event • 84% completed IPT

  6. Time to TST and Time to IPT Before and After THRio Intervention • Time to TST and time to IPT are both markedly improved post-intervention Durovni et al., AIDS 2010, 24 (suppl 5):S49–S56

  7. Methods for Current Analysis Primary endpoints: Incidence of TB and TB or death at the clinic level before and after the intervention Eligible patients who made > 1 visit after 1 Sept 2003 • ‘Eligible’ = no prior TB or IPT • ‘Prevalent’ TB and deaths (within 60 days of enrollment) excluded • Patients remain in the denominator until TB or Death Intent-to-treat Analysis – includes all eligibles “Stayers” Analysis -- among those remaining in clinic contact, censoring those missing for >1 year (mITT) Statistical analysis: Crude hazard ratios (HR) obtained from frailty-adjusted Cox models are presented

  8. CONSORT Diagram (modified for stepped wedge cluster-randomized trial)

  9. THRio cohort characteristics (n=12,815) • Median age: 37 years old • Male: 61% • Median years since HIV diagnosis: 2.4 years • HAART at entry: 60% • Median CD4 cell count at entry: 403 cells/mm3

  10. THRio Results TB cases, total contribution time, incidence per 100pyrs Control Phase Intervention Phase Cases 221 254 Person years 16,834 23,126 Rate/100pyrs 1.31 1.10 TB/Death cases, total contribution time, incidence per 100pyrs Control Phase Intervention Phase Cases 617 696 Person years 16,834 23,126 Rate/100pyrs 3.67 3.01

  11. THRio Results: Unadjusted Cox Models • Intent-to-treat – Among all eligibles

  12. THRio Results: Unadjusted Cox Models • Intent-to-treat – Among all eligibles • Stayers – mITT - Among those remaining in clinic contact • (Patients censored at the moment they go one year without a clinic contact)

  13. Conclusions • Overall, the THRio intervention had a modest impact (13% reduction) on TB, but showed an important and statistically significant impact on TB and death (28% reduction) in the primary intent-to-treat analysis; • The “Stayers” analysis, including those who were more likely to be exposed to the intervention (mITT), showed an even larger and highly significant impact on reduction of TB incidence (43%) and TB incidence and death (44%) • TST screening and provision of IPT to HIV-infected patients with access to highly active antiretroviral therapy significantly reduces the risk of TB and death and should be widely implemented

  14. Rio de Janeiro • BetinaDurovni • SolangeCavalcante • Valeria Saraceni • Antonio Pacheco • Giselle Israel • Vitoria Vellozo • Rita Ferreira • LilianLauria • THRio Study Team • JHU • Richard Chaisson • Jonathan Golub • Larry Moulton • Silvia Cohn • Bonnie King • Anne Efron • Susan Dorman THRio Study Team Funding: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

More Related