Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic Review

Background: Tuberculosis, like COVID-19, is most often a pulmonary disease. The COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted tuberculosis services in myriad ways: health facility closures, lockdowns, travel bans, overwhelmed healthcare systems, restricted export of antituberculous drugs, etc. The effect...

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Main Authors: Tulip A. Jhaveri, Celia Fung, Allison N. LaHood, Andrew Lindeborg, Chengbo Zeng, Rifat Rahman, Paul A. Bain, Gustavo E. Velásquez, Carole D. Mitnick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-09-01
Series:Journal of Clinical Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/11/19/5656
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author Tulip A. Jhaveri
Celia Fung
Allison N. LaHood
Andrew Lindeborg
Chengbo Zeng
Rifat Rahman
Paul A. Bain
Gustavo E. Velásquez
Carole D. Mitnick
author_facet Tulip A. Jhaveri
Celia Fung
Allison N. LaHood
Andrew Lindeborg
Chengbo Zeng
Rifat Rahman
Paul A. Bain
Gustavo E. Velásquez
Carole D. Mitnick
author_sort Tulip A. Jhaveri
collection DOAJ
description Background: Tuberculosis, like COVID-19, is most often a pulmonary disease. The COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted tuberculosis services in myriad ways: health facility closures, lockdowns, travel bans, overwhelmed healthcare systems, restricted export of antituberculous drugs, etc. The effects of the shared risk on outcomes of the two diseases is not known, particularly for the first year of the pandemic, during the period before COVID-19 vaccines became widely available. Objective: We embarked on a systematic review to elucidate the consequences of tuberculosis on COVID-19 outcomes and of COVID-19 on tuberculosis outcomes during the pre-vaccination period of the pandemic. Methods: The systematic review protocol is registered in PROSPERO. We conducted an initial search of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, WHO coronavirus database, medRxiv, bioRxiv, preprints.org, and Google Scholar using terms relating to COVID-19 and tuberculosis. We selected cohort and case–control studies for extraction and assessed quality with the Newcastle-Ottawa scale. Results and Conclusion: 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.
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spelling doaj.art-c433ad8146594cb792cbe9515331b7ed2023-11-23T20:46:38ZengMDPI AGJournal of Clinical Medicine2077-03832022-09-011119565610.3390/jcm11195656Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic ReviewTulip A. Jhaveri0Celia Fung1Allison N. LaHood2Andrew Lindeborg3Chengbo Zeng4Rifat Rahman5Paul A. Bain6Gustavo E. Velásquez7Carole D. Mitnick8Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS 39216, USADepartment of Neurology, Yale New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT 06510, USADepartment of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USADepartment of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USADepartment of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USADepartment of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USAFrancis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USAUCSF Center for Tuberculosis, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94110, USADepartment of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USABackground: Tuberculosis, like COVID-19, is most often a pulmonary disease. The COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted tuberculosis services in myriad ways: health facility closures, lockdowns, travel bans, overwhelmed healthcare systems, restricted export of antituberculous drugs, etc. The effects of the shared risk on outcomes of the two diseases is not known, particularly for the first year of the pandemic, during the period before COVID-19 vaccines became widely available. Objective: We embarked on a systematic review to elucidate the consequences of tuberculosis on COVID-19 outcomes and of COVID-19 on tuberculosis outcomes during the pre-vaccination period of the pandemic. Methods: The systematic review protocol is registered in PROSPERO. We conducted an initial search of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, WHO coronavirus database, medRxiv, bioRxiv, preprints.org, and Google Scholar using terms relating to COVID-19 and tuberculosis. We selected cohort and case–control studies for extraction and assessed quality with the Newcastle-Ottawa scale. Results and Conclusion: 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.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/11/19/5656COVID-19SARS-CoV-2tuberculosiscomorbiditymortalitysystematic review
spellingShingle Tulip A. Jhaveri
Celia Fung
Allison N. LaHood
Andrew Lindeborg
Chengbo Zeng
Rifat Rahman
Paul A. Bain
Gustavo E. Velásquez
Carole D. Mitnick
Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic Review
Journal of Clinical Medicine
COVID-19
SARS-CoV-2
tuberculosis
comorbidity
mortality
systematic review
title Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic Review
title_full Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic Review
title_fullStr Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic Review
title_short Clinical Outcomes of Individuals with COVID-19 and Tuberculosis during the Pre-Vaccination Period of the Pandemic: A Systematic Review
title_sort clinical outcomes of individuals with covid 19 and tuberculosis during the pre vaccination period of the pandemic a systematic review
topic COVID-19
SARS-CoV-2
tuberculosis
comorbidity
mortality
systematic review
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/11/19/5656
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