High Schistosoma mansoni Co-Infection in Tuberculosis Patients with or without Human Immunodeficiency Virus: A Prospective Cohort Study

Author:

Baya Bocar1,Diarra Bassirou1,Dabitao Djeneba Koumba1,Somboro Amadou1,Traore Fah Gaoussou1,Goita Drissa1,Coulibaly Gagni1,Sanogo Moumine1,Wague Mamadou1,Kone Bourahima1,Kone Drissa2,Ouattara Khadidia3,Soumare Dianguina3,Kanoute Tenin3,Toloba Yacouba3,Maiga Almoustapha I1,Maiga Mamoudou4,Diallo Souleymane1,Murphy Robert L4,Doumbia Seydou1

Affiliation:

1. University Clinical Research Center (UCRC)

2. Department of Clinical Laboratory

3. Department of Pneumophtisiology

4. Northwestern University (NU)

Abstract

Abstract

Background People with Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) remain the reservoir of tuberculosis. One-third to 1/4 of the world's population is infected. Its reactivation is due to factors that disrupt the host’s immune response. Recent findings showed that Schistosoma mansoni coinfection leads to a Th2/Th1 profile which results in an immune modulation that favors the escape of the Mycobacteria. Schistosoma mansoni may contribute to TB incidence in endemic regions. We aimed to investigate the coinfection rate and patient outcomes. Methods A prospective cohort study was conducted between 2020–2022 at University Clinical Research Center (UCRC), including culture-confirmed active pulmonary TB patients and tested for Schistosoma mansoni in stools using Kato-Katz Technique. After descriptive analysis a logistic regression was performed to determine risk factors associated with TB and Schistosoma mansoni co-infection. Results Data of 174 tuberculosis-confirmed patients, Kato-Katz tested were analyzed. Males represented 62.6%, mean age was 34.9 ± 13.8 years, 29.9% were smokers, alcohol consumption 13.8%, TB contact history 26.4%, HIV coinfection 11.5%, diabetes 6.3%, undernourished 55.7%. Schistosoma mansoni prevalence was 28.7%. The co-infection was associated with less lung cavitation [aOR = 0.24 [95% CI (0.06–0.85), p = 0.028], unfavorable treatment result [aOR = 2.95 (1.23–7.08), p = 0.015] and death [aOR = 3.43 (1.12–10.58), p = 0.032]. Conclusions Despite Kato-Katz's low sensitivity, Schistosoma mansoni coinfection was found in one-third of the TB patients; 2.5-fold higher than that of HIV. The coinfection was associated with poor treatment results and death.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Reference35 articles.

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4. Organisation Mondiale de la Santé. Cadre pour la mise en œuvre de la. Stratégie de l’OMS pour mettre fin a la tuberculose dans la Région africaine au cours de la période 2016–2020. Genève; 2017, Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO.

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