Abstract

IntroductionTuberculosis (TB) is a leading cause of mortality among people living with HIV (PLHIV). An invigorated global END TB Strategy seeks to increase efforts in scaling up TB preventive therapy (TPT) as a central intervention for HIV programmes in an effort to contribute to a 90% reduction in TB incidence and 95% reduction in mortality by 2035. TPT in PLHIV should be part of a comprehensive approach to reduce TB transmission, illness and death that also includes TB active case‐finding and prompt, effective and timely initiation of anti‐TB therapy among PLHIV. However, the use and implementation of preventive strategies has remained deplorably inadequate and today TB prevention among PLHIV has become an urgent priority globally.DiscussionWe present a summary of the current and novel TPT regimens, including current evidence of use with antiretroviral regimens (ART). We review challenges and opportunities to scale‐up TB prevention within HIV programmes, including the use of differentiated care approaches and demand creation for effective TB/HIV services delivery. TB preventive vaccines and diagnostics, including optimal algorithms, while important topics, are outside of the focus of this commentary.ConclusionsA number of new tools and strategies to make TPT a standard of care in HIV programmes have become available. The new TPT regimens are safe and effective and can be used with current ART, with attention being paid to potential drug‐drug interactions between rifamycins and some classes of antiretrovirals. More research and development is needed to optimize TPT for small children, pregnant women and drug‐resistant TB (DR‐TB). Effective programmatic scale‐up can be supported through context‐adapted demand creation strategies and the inclusion of TPT in client‐centred services, such as differentiated service delivery (DSD) models. Robust collaboration between the HIV and TB programmes represents a unique opportunity to ensure that TB, a preventable and curable condition, is no longer the number one cause of death in PLHIV.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB) is a leading cause of mortality among people living with HIV (PLHIV)

  • Evidence shows that TB preventive therapy (TPT) reduces TB incidence, and mortality in PLHIV up to 37% independent of antiretroviral regimens (ART) and is a cost-effective intervention, even using shorter regimens [9,10,11]

  • Revitalized approaches to TB prevention that significantly expand the range of TPT options, combined with the integration in people-centred models of care and a solid engagement with communities, will contribute to decrease morbidity and mortality in HIV-associated TB

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Tuberculosis (TB) is a leading cause of mortality among people living with HIV (PLHIV). Modelling studies underpin expanded use of TPT as an essential intervention to reduce the global TB burden, with great effect in high HIV prevalence settings [12,13,14]. Despite these facts, TPT scale-up within HIV programmes has been appallingly low and insufficient to effectively decrease the TB burden in PLHIV [8,10,15,16,17,18,19,20]. We call for action to stakeholders in HIV high-burden settings to improve access to new TPT, exploring innovative ways to deliver TPT using differentiated services and demand creation approaches

| DISCUSSION
Findings
| CONCLUSIONS
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