Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2013)

Tuberculosis and HIV Co-infection, California, USA, 1993–2008

  • John Z. Metcalfe,
  • Travis C. Porco,
  • Janice Westenhouse,
  • Mark Damesyn,
  • Matt Facer,
  • Julia Hill,
  • Qiang Xia,
  • James P. Watt,
  • Philip C. Hopewell,
  • Jennifer Flood

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1903.121521
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 3
pp. 400 – 406

Abstract

Read online

To understand the epidemiology of tuberculosis (TB) and HIV co-infection in California, we cross-matched incident TB cases reported to state surveillance systems during 1993–2008 with cases in the state HIV/AIDS registry. Of 57,527 TB case-patients, 3,904 (7%) had known HIV infection. TB rates for persons with HIV declined from 437 to 126 cases/100,000 persons during 1993–2008; rates were highest for Hispanics (225/100,000) and Blacks (148/100,000). Patients co-infected with TB–HIV during 2001–2008 were significantly more likely than those infected before highly active antiretroviral therapy became available to be foreign born, Hispanic, or Asian/Pacific Islander and to have pyrazinamide-monoresistant TB. Death rates decreased after highly active antiretroviral therapy became available but remained twice that for TB patients without HIV infection and higher for women. In California, HIV-associated TB has concentrated among persons from low and middle income countries who often acquire HIV infection in the peri-immigration period.

Keywords