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Experts
discover new information about Diabetes’
Link to Tuberculosis
Newswise — New evidence discovered by
researchers at The University of Texas
School of Public Health Brownsville Regional
Campus shows that patients with Type 2
diabetes may be at increased risk of
contracting tuberculosis because of a
compromised immune system, resulting in
life-threatening lung infections that are
more difficult to treat.
Blanca I. Restrepo, Ph.D., assistant
professor of epidemiology; and Susan P.
Fisher-Hoch, M.D., professor of
epidemiology; and Joseph B. McCormick, M.D.,
regional dean, previously reported that Type
2 diabetes was the leading risk factor for
tuberculosis (TB) in the United
States/Mexico border area.
Several other studies in Asia and elsewhere
have confirmed this observation.
The UT School of Public Health team has now
led three new studies that revealed key
findings:
*Type 2 diabetes, especially Type 2 diabetes
involving chronic high blood sugar, is
associated with altered immune response to
TB, and this was particularly marked in
patients with chronically high blood sugar.
*Patients with diabetes and TB take longer
to respond to anti-TB treatment.
*Patients with active tuberculosis and Type
2 diabetes are more likely to have
multi-drug resistant TB.
The World Health Organization estimates that
180 million people in the world have
diabetes, and that number is expected to
double by 2030. Also, according to the WHO,
each person with active, untreated TB
infects on average 10 to 15 people per year.
"You do the math and it adds up to a major
public health threat," McCormick said.
"If you have Type 2 diabetes in an area with
high rates of TB, your chances of getting TB
goes up. In countries where a third of the
population is infected with TB, this becomes
a real issue."
In a recently published study in Clinical
Infectious Diseases, researchers reported
that the immune systems of patients with
Type 2 diabetes and tuberculosis respond
differently compared with patients with TB
alone.
"This immune impairment may be what makes
patients with diabetes so susceptible to
TB," said Fisher-Hoch, whose career as a
scientist was recently honored with a Hall
of Fame Award from Women In Technology
International.
Restrepo and her colleagues found that
innate and type 1 cytokine responses were
significantly higher in patients with
tuberculosis who had diabetes than in the
control group of patients with TB and no
diabetes.
The effect was consistently and
significantly more marked in diabetic
patients with chronic hyperglycemia, or
uncontrolled high blood sugar. Diabetes
results in the body's ineffective use of
insulin.
If left uncontrolled, the chronic high sugar
in the bloodstream can affect the critical
immune system and damage the body's systems,
especially the nerves, the retina of the
eyes and blood vessels.
“These findings are the opposite of what we
were expecting,” Restrepo said.
“These innate and type 1 cytokines are
typically associated with TB protection, but
in patients with diabetes, it appears the
cytokines are not effective.
"Diabetics
may have more advanced TB with more
bacteria, and hence, more stimulation for
secretion of type 1 cytokines.”
The researchers wrote, "More detailed
knowledge of the underlying mechanisms
should focus on the effect of chronic
hyperglycemia on the immune response to help
in understanding the enhanced susceptibility
of diabetic patients with tuberculosis."
In a second study, which was published in an
October issue of the American Journal of
Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, the
researchers demonstrated that diabetic
patients with TB were more likely to take
longer to clear the TB bacterium during the
first phase of treatment than TB patients
who are not diabetic.
Using data from 469 TB patients in south
Texas, those with diabetes had a five-day
delay in mycobacterial clearance within the
first 60 days of treatment.
"Despite the goal of global eradication by
the year 2050, in 2004, there were an
estimated 8.9 million new cases of TB
worldwide," the researchers wrote.
"Our data showed that adult onset diabetes
mellitus (also known as Type 2 diabetes)
seems to interfere with sterilization of
pulmonary TB by drug therapy. By 2030, it is
estimated that 336 million of the world's
population will have diabetes mellitus, many
in TB-endemic countries.
Diabetes on this scale may impact TB
control. Prospective studies are needed to
define more clearly the consequences for
transmission among diabetes patients and the
prevention and therapeutic measures that
might be taken to lessen the effect."
A third study demonstrated that patients
with diabetes were more at risk of
developing multi-drug resistant
tuberculosis.
In an Epub abstract online in Scandinavian
Journal of Infectious Diseases, researchers
reported that almost 6 percent of patients
living along the Texas-Mexico border had TB
that was resistant to rifampin and isoniazid,
common medications for tuberculosis. Of
those with multi-drug resistant
tuberculosis, 30 percent also had Type 2
diabetes.
"It is possible that impaired immunity in
Type 2 diabetes increases susceptibility to
infection with resistant strains," the
abstract states.
McCormick, the senior author of all three
papers, said these research findings shed
new light on a long-known correlation
between diabetes and tuberculosis.
"It opens a door to doing something about
it," said McCormick, the university's James
H. Steele Professor. "We can educate
physicians and offer more TB screenings.
"We
have an opportunity to make sure patients
are diagnosed correctly and that there is no
delay in diagnosis."
Fisher-Hoch said the research could help
diagnosis TB patients who previously would
not be considered at risk for contracting
the airborne, contagious disease.
"The classic TB patient in this country is a
younger male in an urban setting who may
have alcohol and drug abuse problems and be
HIV-infected," she said.
"Our research shows older female patients
who have never been in jail and have no
history of alcohol and drug abuse or HIV
infection are at risk of contracting TB if
they have diabetes."
"I think we are illuminating a very
important association between TB and
diabetes that had pretty well been
overlooked," Fisher-Hoch added.
"The public health aspect is that we are
trying to make sure we can prevent and treat
these patients, and when they are
TB-infected, treat them better."
Fisher-Hoch recommends that medical
professionals screen patients for TB if they
have diabetes and a chronic cough.
She also recommends that patients with Type
2 diabetes take precautions.
"If they are visiting an area where there is
a lot TB, they need to be careful," she
said. "TB spreads in crowded places with
poor ventilation."
The research was supported in part by the
Center for Clinical and Translational
Sciences at The University of Texas Health
Science Center at Houston, which includes
the UT School of Public Health and its five
regional campuses. Important logistics
support was provided by the Hidalgo County
Health Department.
In addition to epidemiologists at the UT
School of Public Health at the main campus
in Houston and Brownsville Regional Campus,
researchers included those from the Texas
Department of State and Health Services
Region 11, Michigan State University, The
University of Texas at Austin and Secretaria
de Salud de Tamaulipas.
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