Clinical Characteristics and Radiologic Features of Immunocompromised Patients With Pauci-Bacillary Pulmonary Tuberculosis Receiving Delayed Diagnosis and Treatment

Open Forum Infect Dis. 2019 Jan 17;6(2):ofz002. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofz002. eCollection 2019 Feb.

Abstract

Background: Pauci-bacillary pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) can be delayed to diagnose and start anti-TB therapy, especially in immunocompromised patients. We therefore evaluated the clinical and radiologic features of these delayed cases.

Methods: Immunocompromised adult patients with pauci-bacillary pulmonary TB were retrospectively enrolled in a tertiary hospital in an intermediate-TB burden country over a 5-year period. We defined "missed TB" or "not-missed TB" patients as those who started anti-TB therapy after or before positive mycobacterial culture results, respectively.

Results: Of 258 patients, 134 (52%) were classified in the missed TB group, and 124 (48%) in the not-missed TB group. Positive results of molecular tests including MTB polymerase chain reaction and/or Xpert TB/RIF were only obtained in the not-missed TB group (54/106, 54%). The median diagnostic delay in the missed TB group was longer than in the other group (30 vs 6 days; P < .001). In the missed TB group, the most common working diagnoses were pneumonia (46, 34%) and lung metastasis of malignancy (40, 30%). Typical radiologic findings for TB, such as upper lobe predominance and centrilobular nodules with tree-in-bud appearance, were less common in the missed TB group than in the other group. Old age (odds ratio [OR], 1.03), solid organ transplant (OR, 3.46), solid tumor (OR, 3.83), and hematologic malignancy (OR, 4.04) were independently associated with missed TB.

Conclusions: Care is needed to differentiate pauci-bacillary TB, especially in immunocompromised patients with the mentioned risk factors, even without the usual radiologic features of TB. Additional rapid diagnostic tests to rule out pauci-bacillary TB are urgently needed.

Keywords: immunocompromised; pauci-bacillary; tuberculosis.