STOP TB Partnership Indonesia
Berita & Kegiatan
Dalam
mendukung program pengendalian TB nasional, USAID mengundang mitra TB: LSM,
Organisasi Berbasis Masyarakat, Organisasi Berbasis Agama dan lainnya, melalui
program Community Empowerment of People
Against Tuberculosis (CEPAT). Pada tanggal 6 Desember 2011 USAID telah
mengundang mitra untuk dapat mengajukan proposal. Untuk lebih lengkapnya dapat
langsung membuka link: (http://www.grants.gov/search/
search.do?mode=VIEW&oppId=
132873 )
Untuk Strategi Nasional Pengendalian TB dapat membuka link: http://www.tbindonesia.or.id/
A study in Indonesia has found that people with HIV who injected drugs were 85% more likely to have HIV-associated tuberculosis than those who were not injecting drug users. The findings were presented at the 42nd Union World Lung Health Conference held in Lille, France, last week. The risk of TB in injecting drug users with HIV infection has rarely been quantified outside Western Europe and North America.
According to Dr van Crevel of the Radboud University in Nijmegen, Netherlands, who analysed a cohort of ARV-naive HIV-infected patients, made up of 658 injecting drug users (IDU) and 532 non-IDUs, injecting drug use was a significant risk factor for HIV-associated TB after controlling for CD4 count and other baseline characteristics such as age, gender and history of TB (hazard ratio 1.85, 95% confidence interval 1.28 - 2.67).
However, at baseline, 90 percent of
the IDU arm was male compared to 37 percent in the non-IDU arm. 90 percent of
the IDU arm was co-infected with hepititis C (HCV). Study participants were
followed for a median of 260 days (IQR: 12-365 days) until the first episode of
TB after HIV diagnosis.
Indonesia has the world's fifth highest TB case load and one of the most
rapidly growing HIV epidemics, driven largely by injecting drug use. Drug use
in Indonesia is most often found in higher socio-economic groups. Thus the
increased risk of HIV-associated TB in IDUs is not associated with conditions
of poverty, unlike in sub-Saharan Africa. 89 percent of the IDU participants
had university degrees or higher education, compared to 72 percent in the
non-IDU arm. Similarly, 72 percent of those who were injecting drug users had a
job compared to only 47 percent in the non-IDU arm.
According to the researchers, the increased risk of TB in IDUs may be a
consequence of more frequent exposure to TB when gathering in non-ventilated
spaces to use drugs, leading to a higher rate of latent TB.
The researchers also propose that the increased risk may be due to biological
reasons such as a higher HIV viral load or HCV coinfection. Animal studies have
also shown an increased negative effect on the immune system when using
opioids, which may contribute to the development of TB disease.
In Indonesia it is more popular to inject opioids than to smoke them, although
IDUs often smoke tobacco (although this was not measured in this cohort), which
is also associated with TB disease.
More research is required into the key cause of the increased risk of
HIV-associated TB in IDUs but in the meantime health services should screen all
HIV-infected IDUs for TB at every health visit and pay increasing attention to
TB in injecting drug users, say the researchers.
The World Health Organization recommends that HIV and TB services for people
who inject drugs should be integrated. Examples of integrated services were
described in a May 2010 edition of HIV & AIDS Treatment in Practice, NAM's
newsletter on HIV treatment in low and middle-income settings.
Reference
H Meijerink et al. Injecting drug use as a risk factor for TB among
HIV-infected patients in Indonesia, 42nd Union World Lung Health Conference,
Lille, France. Presentation OP-938-29
Latar Belakang
Tuberkulosis
atau TB masih merupakan masalah kesehatan masyarakat yang menjadi tantangan
global. Indonesia merupakan negara pertama diantara negara-negara dengan beban
TB yang tinggi di wilayah Asia Tenggara yang berhasil mencapai target Millenium
Development Goals untuk TB pada tahun 2006, yaitu 70% deteksi dini dan 85%
kesembuhan. Saat ini, Indonesia juga menghadapi berbagai tantangan baru
seperti halnya TB/HIV, MDR-TB, TB pada anak dan masyarakat rentan lainnya, dan penemuan
kasus TB mengalami stagnansi dalam beberapa tahun belakangan
ini..
Fenomena seperti ini dialami bukan saja oleh Indonesia, tetapi juga pada
negara-negara yang tergolong TB high burden countries.
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