Additional Usefulness of Bronchoscopy in Patients with Initial Microbiologically Negative Pulmonary Tuberculosis: A Retrospective Analysis of a Korean Nationwide Prospective Cohort Study

Infect Drug Resist. 2022 Mar 12:15:1029-1037. doi: 10.2147/IDR.S354962. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Purpose: Bronchoscopy is widely used for microbiological diagnosis of patients with minimal sputum production. However, the usefulness of bronchoscopy in patient groups who benefit from subsequent microbiological confirmation has not been established.

Patients and methods: We retrospectively analyzed Korean tuberculosis (TB) cohort data from September 2018 to October 2019 to evaluate the usefulness of bronchoscopy in patients with microbiologically negative pulmonary TB (based on initial sputum polymerase chain reaction and culture results). The primary outcome was the proportion of microbiological diagnoses made after bronchoscopy. Secondary outcomes were the predictors of microbiological confirmation and the percentage of additional resistance detection after bronchoscopy.

Results: A total of 5194 patients were diagnosed with pulmonary TB, 937 of whom were microbiologically negative for pulmonary TB based on the initial sputum findings. Of these, 319 patients underwent bronchoscopy, and further microbiological confirmation was achieved in 157 (49.1%) patients. The predictors of microbiological confirmation after bronchoscopy were age >65 years, female sex, and low body mass index (BMI). The rate of additional resistance detection was 10.5% (multidrug resistant/rifampin-resistant 3.8%; isoniazid-resistant 5.7%).

Conclusion: Bronchoscopy can be used for the detection of resistant pathogens. Bronchoscopy should be considered for microbiologically negative pulmonary TB in women aged >65 years and with low BMI for subsequent microbiological confirmation.

Keywords: bronchoscopy; cohort studies; pulmonary; tuberculosis.

Grants and funding

This study was supported by the National Health Promotion Fund funded by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency, Republic of Korea. This work was supported by a Korea University Guro Hospital grant (No. O1905151).