Relationship between chest radiographic characteristics, sputum bacterial load, and treatment outcomes in patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis

Autor: J.B. te Riele, V. Buser, G. Calligaro, A. Esmail, G. Theron, M. Lesosky, K. Dheda
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: International Journal of Infectious Diseases, Vol 79, Iss , Pp 65-71 (2019)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 1201-9712
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijid.2018.10.026
Popis: Background: Data about the relationship between chest radiographs and sputum bacillary load, with treatment outcomes, in patients with extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) from HIV/TB endemic settings are limited. Methods: Available chest radiographs from 97 South African XDR-TB patients, at the time of diagnosis, were evaluated by two independent readers using a validated scoring system. Chest radiograph findings were correlated with baseline sputum bacillary load (smear-grade and culture time-to-positive in MGIT), and prospectively ascertained clinical outcomes (culture conversion and all-cause mortality). Results: Radiographic bilateral lung disease was present in 75/97 (77%). In the multivariate analysis only a higher total radiographic score (95% CI) was associated with higher likelihood of death [1.16 (1.05–1.28) p = 0.003], and failure to culture convert [0.85 (0.74–0.97) p = 0.02]. However, when restricting analyses to HIV-infected patients, disease extent, cavitation, and total radiographic scores were not associated with mortality or culture-conversion. Finally, cavitary, disease extent, and total radiographic scores all positively correlated with bacterial load (culture time-to-positive). Conclusions: In endemic settings, XDR-TB radiological disease extent scores are associated with adverse clinical outcomes, including mortality, in HIV uninfected persons. These data may have implications for clinical and programmatic decision-making and for evaluation of new regimens in clinical trials. Keywords: XDR-TB, Chest radiography, Lung disease extent, Cavitary disease
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