Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major infectious challenge worldwide, notably in immunocompromised hosts. Guidelines for management exist. 1-3 In areas with low TB endemicity, the prevalence among transplant recipients is 0.5%-6.4%, rising to 15.2% in highly endemic areas. 4,5 Factors affecting TB incidence after transplant include T cell-depleting therapies, treatment of graft rejection, renal insufficiency, chronic liver disease, diabetes mellitus, hepatitis C virus infection, and increased recipient age. 3,4 Most transplant patients present with pulmonary TB (51%), while 16% have extrapulmonary disease and 33% have disseminated TB. Only 64% of recipients withtigen 4 (CTLA-4), programmed cell death 1, and programmed cell death 1 ligand exert inhibitory functions on T cell activation by antigen; CTLA-4 and programmed cell death 1 deficiencies or inhibition enhance M. tuberculosis-specific T cell expansion (immune reconstitution) with tissue necrosis and development of more numerous pulmonary lesions and increased mortality. 9 The mechanisms underlying this effect are uncertain. Belatacept blocks both CTLA-4 (T cell inhibitory) and CD28 (T cell activating). Thus, costimulatory blockade might disrupt the maintenance of latency via disparate mechanisms: suppression of Th1 responses and recruitment of naïve T cells; induced unresponsiveness (anergy or regulatory T cells) to tuberculous antigens in the presence of latent (low-level replication) infection or distant childhood BCG vaccinations; or, conversely, by stimulating immune reconstitution with necrosis of granulomata and bacillary spread. In follow-up studies of belatacept, cases of TB (in endemic regions) as well as Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-associated posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder were noted. 10 It is unclear whether the mechanisms underlying the | 1263 EDITORIAL impact of belatacept on EBV and posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder risk might be related to the effect on TB risk. In belatacept-treated patients, most lymphomas occur in EBV-negative recipients of EBV-positive kidneys, presumably new antigen exposure. Regardless of the mechanism, screening and chemoprophylaxis for TB might be emphasized in patients who will be receiving belatacept, notably in regions endemic for TB. Given the public health importance of TB, understanding of the complex immune responses to M. tuberculosis may facilitate clinical management and impact vaccine development.