Pretreatment chest x-ray severity and its relation to bacterial burden in smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis

被引:36
作者
Murthy, S. E. [1 ]
Chatterjee, F. [2 ]
Crook, A. [3 ]
Dawson, R. [4 ]
Mendel, C. [5 ]
Murphy, M. E. [1 ]
Murray, S. R. [5 ]
Nunn, A. J. [3 ]
Phillips, P. P. J. [3 ]
Singh, Kasha P. [1 ]
McHugh, T. D. [1 ]
Gillespie, S. H. [6 ]
机构
[1] UCL, Dept Infect, UCL Ctr Clin Microbiol, Royal Free Campus,Rowland Hill St, London NW3 2PF, England
[2] Royal London Hosp, Barts Hlth NHS Trust, Dept Radiol, Whitechapel Rd, London E1 1BB, England
[3] UCL, Med Res Council UK Clin Trials Unit, Aviat House,125 Kingsway, London WC2B 6NH, England
[4] Univ Cape Town, Lung Inst, George St, Cape Town, South Africa
[5] Global Alliance TB Drug Dev, New York, NY 10005 USA
[6] Univ St Andrews, Sch Med, Med & Biol Sci, St Andrews KY16 9TF, Fife, Scotland
来源
BMC MEDICINE | 2018年 / 16卷
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Pulmonary tuberculosis; chest x-ray; cavitation; pretreatment; MYCOBACTERIUM-TUBERCULOSIS; DIAGNOSTIC-ACCURACY; CT FINDINGS; RADIOGRAPHY; SYMPTOMS; DISEASE; LOAD; MOXIFLOXACIN; ASSOCIATION; DERIVATION;
D O I
10.1186/s12916-018-1053-3
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: Chest radiographs are used for diagnosis and severity assessment in tuberculosis (TB). The extent of disease as determined by smear grade and cavitation as a binary measure can predict 2-month smear results, but little has been done to determine whether radiological severity reflects the bacterial burden at diagnosis. Methods: Pre-treatment chest x-rays from 1837 participants with smear-positive pulmonary TB enrolled into the REMoxTB trial (Gillespie et al., N Engl J Med 371:1577-87, 2014) were retrospectively reviewed. Two clinicians blinded to clinical details using the Ralph scoring system performed separate readings. An independent reader reviewed discrepant results for quality assessment and cavity presence. Cavitation presence was plotted against time to positivity (TTP) of sputum liquid cultures (MGIT 960). The Wilcoxon rank sum test was performed to calculate the difference in average TTP for these groups. The average lung field affected was compared to log 10 TTP by linear regression. Baseline markers of disease severity and patient characteristics were added in univariable regression analysis against radiological severity and a multivariable regression model was created to explore their relationship. Results: For 1354 participants, the median TTP was 117 h (4.88 days), being 26 h longer (95% CI 16-30, p < 0.001) in patients without cavitation compared to those with cavitation. The median percentage of lung-field affected was 18.1% (IQR 11.3-28.8%). For every 10-fold increase in TTP, the area of lung field affected decreased by 11.4%. Multivariable models showed that serum albumin decreased significantly as the percentage of lung field area increased in both those with and without cavitation. In addition, BMI and logged TTP had a small but significant effect in those with cavitation and the number of severe TB symptoms in the non-cavitation group also had a small effect, whilst other factors found to be significant on univariable analysis lost this effect in the model. Conclusions: The radiological severity of disease on chest x-ray prior to treatment in smear positive pulmonary TB patients is weakly associated with the bacterial burden. When compared against other variables at diagnosis, this effect is lost in those without cavitation. Radiological severity does reflect the overall disease severity in smear positive pulmonary TB, but we suggest that clinicians should be cautious in over-interpreting the significance of radiological disease extent at diagnosis.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 52 条
  • [11] The imaging spectrum of pulmonary tuberculosis
    Cardinale, Luciano
    Parlatano, Daniela
    Boccuzzi, Francesco
    Onoscuri, Maurizio
    Volpicelli, Giovanni
    Veltri, Andrea
    [J]. ACTA RADIOLOGICA, 2015, 56 (05) : 557 - 564
  • [12] Ethnic Variation in Inflammatory Profile in Tuberculosis
    Coussens, Anna K.
    Wilkinson, Robert J.
    Nikolayevskyy, Vladyslav
    Elkington, Paul T.
    Hanifa, Yasmeen
    Islam, Kamrul
    Timms, Peter M.
    Bothamley, Graham H.
    Claxton, Alleyna P.
    Packe, Geoffrey E.
    Darmalingam, Mathina
    Davidson, Robert N.
    Milburn, Heather J.
    Baker, Lucy V.
    Barker, Richard D.
    Drobniewski, Francis A.
    Mein, Charles A.
    Bhaw-Rosun, Leena
    Nuamah, Rosamond A.
    Griffiths, Christopher J.
    Martineau, Adrian R.
    [J]. PLOS PATHOGENS, 2013, 9 (07):
  • [13] Dawson R, 2010, INT J TUBERC LUNG D, V14, P52
  • [14] Tuberculosis and diabetes mellitus: convergence of two epidemics
    Dooley, Kelly E.
    Chaisson, Richard E.
    [J]. LANCET INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2009, 9 (12) : 737 - 746
  • [15] FOX AJ, 1975, BRIT J IND MED, V32, P273
  • [17] Four-Month Moxifloxacin-Based Regimens for Drug-Sensitive Tuberculosis
    Gillespie, Stephen H.
    Crook, Angela M.
    McHugh, Timothy D.
    Mendel, Carl M.
    Meredith, Sarah K.
    Murray, Stephen R.
    Pappas, Frances
    Phillips, Patrick P. J.
    Nunn, Andrew J.
    [J]. NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2014, 371 (17) : 1577 - 1587
  • [18] Hales Craig M, 2013, Ann Am Thorac Soc, V10, P18, DOI 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201207-038OC
  • [19] Hamilton CD, 2008, INT J TUBERC LUNG D, V12, P1059
  • [20] Tuberculosis Outcomes in Papua, Indonesia: The Relationship with Different Body Mass Index Characteristics between Papuan and Non-Papuan Ethnic Groups
    Kenangalem, Enny
    Waramori, Govert
    Pontororing, Gysje J.
    Sandjaja
    Tjitra, Emiliana
    Maguire, Graeme
    Kelly, Paul M.
    Anstey, Nicholas M.
    Ralph, Anna P.
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (09):