Thalidomide as an Adjunctive Therapy for HIV-Tuberculosis-Associated Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome: A Case Series.

Thalidomide as an Adjunctive Therapy for HIV-Tuberculosis-Associated Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome: A Case Series.

Publication date: Nov 01, 2025

A small proportion of people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who have tuberculosis-related immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (tuberculosis-IRIS) have prolonged and complicated courses and experience poor response to corticosteroid therapy, relapse after withdrawing, or intolerability demonstrating a need for alternative immunomodulatory options. Thalidomide has been shown to have immunomodulatory effects, primarily in neurological tuberculosis in children, but there is little description of its use in adult patients. We describe the clinical course in 7 adult patients with complicated HIV-associated tuberculosis-IRIS treated with thalidomide. The clinical manifestations included central nervous system tuberculosis (n = 4) , tuberculous adenitis (n = 2), and recurrent tuberculous psoas collection (n = 1). All patients were given thalidomide (100 mg) for 6-12 months, with favorable clinical outcomes and no adverse effects. Thalidomide dosed at 100 mg/d remains an agent with clinical utility in this small subset of patients, and further research to determine optimal dosing and duration could be beneficial.

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Concepts Keywords
Immunodeficiency tuberculous adenitis
Iris tuberculous meningitis
Therapy tumor necrosis factor
Tuberculosis

Semantics

Type Source Name
drug DRUGBANK Thalidomide
disease MESH Tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease MESH Immune Reconstitution Inflammatory Syndrome
disease IDO immunodeficiency
disease MESH relapse
disease MESH clinical course
disease MESH central nervous system tuberculosis
disease MESH adenitis
disease MESH tuberculous meningitis

Original Article

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