Update: Cotrimoxazole Prophylaxis

This article originally appeared in HIV & AIDS treatment in practice, an email newsletter for healthcare workers and community-based organisations in resource-limited settings published by NAM between 2003 and 2014.
This article is more than 21 years old.

From HATIP #1 - click here to read original article.

EXPANDING THE EVIDENCE BASE FOR CO-TRIMOXAZOLE USE

The 2 May issue of the journal AIDS reports a study from Malawi (Zachariah et al) which adds to the evidence that co-trimoxazole can reduce mortality among people with HIV diagnosed with TB. This evidence is discussed by Dr Peter Godfrey-Faussett of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in a related editorial.

Glossary

rash

A rash is an area of irritated or swollen skin, affecting its colour, appearance, or texture. It may be localised in one part of the body or affect all the skin. Rashes are usually caused by inflammation of the skin, which can have many causes, including an allergic reaction to a medicine.

smear

A specimen of tissue or other material taken from part of the body and smeared onto a microscope slide for examination. A Pap smear is a specimen of material scraped from the cervix (neck of the uterus) examined for precancerous changes.

control group

A group of participants in a trial who receive standard treatment, or no treatment at all, rather than the experimental treatment which is being tested. Also known as a control arm.

pulmonary

Affecting the lungs.

 

chemotherapy

The use of drugs to treat an illness, especially cancer.

Godfrey-Faussett's editorial sets out the challenge very starkly. In Malawi, which closely follows WHO's DOTS strategy and has done so for many years, "one in every three patients who starts anti-tuberculous chemotherapy is dead before the end of the course". Given that three quarters are HIV positive, the main reason is likely to be AIDS-related. In 1999 two randomised controlled trials in Cote d'Ivoire found survival benefits from offering co-trimoxazole prophylaxis to people with HIV whose CD4 counts were below 500, or who had symptomatic HIV disease. This led to the early cessation of other randomised controlled trials of co-trimoxazole prophylaxis. This has left the evidence base weak and open to argument (as expressed in the differences of view among our Advisory Panel).

Reviewing the study (described below) Godfrey-Faussett argues that while it adds to the evidence, it is still insufficient as a basis for national policy. He proposes that Malawi and similar countries should respond by rolling out a programme, district by district, and include an element of randomisation when deciding which districts should start each year. In this way, the evidence base could be strengthened further and serious outstanding questions, such as the impact on community prevalence of drug-resistant bacterial infections and malaria, might be answered. The study by Zachariah and others an international collaboration between local healthcare staff, the Malawi National Tuberculosis Control Programme, the NGO Medecins sans Frontieres and researchers in Luxembourg and Liverpool, compares the experience of patients treated for TB before the introduction of HIV counselling, testing, and cotrimoxazole prophylaxis, with the experience in the same district once these services had been provided. Thyolo district, Malawi, has "one government hospital, a mission hospital, and 18 health centres which are involved in TB control activities".

National guidelines for TB treatment were unchanged during the study, although it is impossible to be certain that the standard of care did not change in some way. Several additional staff were employed to provide HIV VCT in this population and additional training for all staff was provided, for example, on how to recognise and manage cotrimoxazole rashes. However, an important feature of this study was that the extra input was kept to a minimum, which means that the intervention should be relatively simple to implement on a wider scale.

In the year from 1 July 1999, all 1061 TB patients in the district were enrolled in the study and offered pre-test counselling and HIV testing the "intervention group". 90 per cent accepted HIV testing and 964 were tested, of whom 740 (77%) were found to be HIV positive. Six died before they were even able to receive the results. Those who tested positive were offered cotrimoxazole - 400mg sulphamethoxazole + 80mg trimethoprim, twice daily - in addition to standard TB treatment. Exceptions were made for those with known allergies to sulpha-containing drugs, pregnant women, women breastfeeding babies under the age of 2 months, and babies of unknown HIV status. 13 who declined to be told their HIV test results agreed to take cotrimoxazole nonetheless; a delicate compromise which may say a lot about the commitment of the clinical staff to their patients. Cotrimoxazole treatment was provided to a total of 693 patients throughout TB treatment and indefinitely afterwards. Adherence to the treatment seems to have been excellent (evidence for this included positive urine tests for trimethoprim). 14 patients (2%) had a dermatological reaction (a skin rash), all within the first two months of treatment, all of which reversed when treatment was stopped.

The control group, registered in the previous year, consisted of 925 patients. HIV prevalence in the control group was not measured, but in the context of a still-rising HIV epidemic in Malawi would most likely have been lower than in the intervention group.

Record-keeping and follow-up were of consistently high quality, which is a credit to all of the staff concerned and to the National Tuberculosis Control Programme. Death rates in the first month of TB treatment were similarly high in both groups, but by four months there was a clear advantage in favour of the intervention group as a whole. The benefit of cotrimoxazole was however limited in this study to those patients with smear-negative or extra-pulmonary TB, who were probably the most immunosuppressed. (Also, only 60% of HIV positive patients with smear-positive pulmonary TB took cotrimoxazole.) The researchers calculate that to save one life during the eight months of TB treatment, it would be necessary to treat 12.5 people with cotrimoxazole.

REFERENCES

Godfrey-Faussett P. District-randomized phased implementation: strengthening the evidence base for cotrimoxazole for HIV-positive tuberculosis patients. AIDS 17:1079-1081, 2003.

Zachariah R et al. Voluntary counselling, HIV testing and adjunctive cotrimoxaxole reduces mortality in tuberculosis patients in Thyolo, Malawi. AIDS 17:1053-1061, 2003.