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Infectious Disease 2026-W23 · Published Jun 4, 2026

This Week in Infectious Disease: HIV Retinitis and Microbiome Research

From the New England Journal of Medicine, a trial reported that pooled cytomegalovirus retinitis prevalence is 3% among people with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa [1].

This systematic review and meta-analysis synthesized data from 1931 people living with HIV, finding a prevalence rate with a 95% confidence interval of 1.6-5.4%. The authors describe these findings as suggesting that clinicians should consider systematic retinal screening for individuals with CD4 counts below 50 cells per microliter in this region.

Meanwhile, attention turned to the intersection of pathogens and oncology. A narrative review in Frontiers in Medicine examined microorganisms in breast cancer [2].

The authors note that the majority of evidence on this topic originates from cross-sectional studies and in vitro or in vivo models, indicating that current data relies heavily on these specific study designs rather than longitudinal clinical trials.

Elsewhere this week, researchers in Frontiers in Medicine described the state of microbiome research within GCC countries [3].

A systematic review of 110 studies found that most publications were observational and focused on human gut and oral microbiomes. The authors note uneven research distribution and highlight that no integrated One Health studies were reported in the literature surveyed.

We also saw research in Frontiers in Medicine addressing the link between viral infections and the gut. A narrative review on COVID-19 and gut microbiome disruption synthesized evidence suggesting that SARS-CoV-2 infection can induce dysbiosis and modify immune signaling [4].

The findings suggest these effects may affect neuropsychiatric outcomes, prompting a consideration of the observational link between the virus, gut dysbiosis, and immune changes for future pandemic planning.

Finally, a meta-analysis in Emerging microbes & infections looked at antibiotic efficacy against resistant organisms [5].

The study synthesized data on carbapenem therapy for monomicrobial OXA-48-producing Enterobacterales infections, analyzing a French cohort of 59 patients alongside other data. The authors analyzed these results to suggest that clinicians should consider prioritizing alternative active agents over carbapenems for OXA-48-PE infections to avoid higher clinical failure rates.

Articles in This Digest

Pooled cytomegalovirus retinitis prevalence is 3% among people with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa Cytomegalovirus retinitis risk varies across sub-Saharan Africa regions
This systematic review and meta-analysis synthesized data from 1931 people living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa. The pooled prevalence of cytomegalovirus retin…
A meta-analysis found that cytomegalovirus retinitis prevalence in people living with HIV ranges from less than 1% to 7% depending on the region in sub-Saharan …
Narrative review examines microorganisms in breast cancer with limited evidence from cross-sectional studies and models Review of microorganisms and breast cancer evidence remains uncertain
This narrative review addresses the role of microorganisms in breast cancer. The authors note that the majority of evidence originates from cross-sectional stud…
A review of microorganisms and breast cancer shows evidence is weak because most data comes from cross-sectional studies and lab models.
Microbiome research in GCC countries is uneven, observational, and lacks One Health integration GCC microbiome research is growing but needs a unified regional plan to help people
This systematic review of 110 studies on microbiome research in GCC countries found most publications were observational and focused on human gut and oral micro…
A review of 110 studies shows the Gulf region is active in microbiome science, yet uneven progress and a lack of One Health approaches hold back real-world bene…
Narrative review on COVID-19 and gut microbiome disruption and immune effects Microbiome disruption may link SARS-CoV-2 to long-term health issues
This narrative review synthesizes evidence on COVID-19 and the intestinal microbiome. It finds SARS-CoV-2 infection can induce dysbiosis and modify immune signa…
A review suggests the virus may alter gut bacteria, immune signals, and brain health, highlighting a need for One Health pandemic preparedness.
Meta-analysis shows carbapenems linked to higher clinical failure in OXA-48-PE infections Doctors found higher death rates when using carbapenems for certain gut bacteria infections
This meta-analysis and review synthesizes data on carbapenem therapy for monomicrobial OXA-48-producing Enterobacterales infections. The authors analyzed a Fren…
A large review of patients with OXA-48 bacteria showed that carbapenem drugs often failed to work. Newer medicines offered better survival chances and fewer tre…
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