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Journal Article > Review

Tuberculosis-HIV co-infection: progress and challenges after two decades of global antiretroviral treatment roll-out

Letang E, Ellis J, Naidoo K, Casas EDT, Sanchez P, Hassan-Moosa R, Cresswell F, Miro JM, Garcia-Basteiro AL
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Abstract
Despite wide antiretroviral scale-up during the past two decades resulting in declining new infections and mortality globally, HIV-associated tuberculosis remains as a major public health concern. Tuberculosis is the leading HIV-associated opportunistic infection and the main cause of death globally and, particularly, in resource-limited settings. Several challenges exist regarding diagnosis, global implementation of latent tuberculosis treatment, management of active tuberculosis, delivery of optimal patient-centered TB and HIV prevention and care in high burden countries. In this article we review the advances on pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment after nearly two decades of global roll-out of antiretroviral therapy and discuss the current challenges for the global control of tuberculosis-HIV co-infection.
Subject Area
tuberculosisHIV/AIDS
DOI
10.1016/j.arbres.2019.11.015
Published Date
01-Jul-2020
PubMed ID
31932150
Languages
English
Journal
Archivos de Bronconeumologia
Volume / Issue / Pages
Volume 56, Issue 7, Pages 446-454
Issue Date
01-Jul-2020
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