Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic Review.
Tulip A JhaveriCelia FungAllison N LaHoodAndrew LindeborgChengbo ZengRifat RahmanPaul A BainGustavo E VelásquezCarole D MitnickPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2022)
We identified 2108 unique abstracts published between December 2019 and January 2021. We extracted data from 18 studies from 8 countries. A total of 650,317 persons had a diagnosis of COVID-19, and 4179 had a diagnosis of current or prior tuberculosis. We explored links between tuberculosis and COVID-19 incidence, mortality, and other adverse outcomes. Nine studies reported on mortality and 13 on other adverse outcomes; results on the association between tuberculosis and COVID-19 mortality/adverse outcomes were heterogenous. Tuberculosis outcomes were not fully available in any studies, due to short follow-up (maximum of 3 months after COVID-19 diagnosis), so the effects of COVID-19 on tuberculosis outcomes could not be assessed. Much of the rapid influx of literature on tuberculosis and COVID-19 during this period was published on preprint servers, and therefore not peer-reviewed. It offered limited examination of the effect of tuberculosis on COVID-19 outcomes and even less on the effect of COVID-19 on tuberculosis treatment outcomes.
Keyphrases
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- hiv aids
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- systematic review
- adverse drug
- risk factors
- type diabetes
- randomized controlled trial
- electronic health record
- hepatitis c virus
- adipose tissue
- artificial intelligence
- sensitive detection
- deep learning
- antiretroviral therapy