Paediatric progressive primary tuberculosis

J Clin Tuberc Other Mycobact Dis. 2022 May 18:28:100318. doi: 10.1016/j.jctube.2022.100318. eCollection 2022 Aug.

Abstract

A previously healthy 13-year-old Japanese girl with a BCG vaccination history and no tuberculosis (TB) exposure history presented to the hospital with mild dyspnea for 1 month and fever for 5 days. Computed tomography showed consolidation with a pleural effusion, obstructed left main bronchus with an air bronchogram, and traction bronchiectasis of the left upper lobe (Fig. 1A, B). No improvement was observed with ampicillin. Computed tomography on day 23 showed a new granular shadow in the right upper lobe (Fig. 1C). Despite a negative interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA) result, the sputum on day 55 was positive for acid-fast bacilli on a ZiehlNeelsen stain and Mycobacterium tuberculosis on polymerase chain reaction. A fourdrug antituberculous regimen was initiated and she recovered rapidly. TB exposure history, positive tuberculin skin test or IGRA, and typical imaging findings are the triad for primary TB diagnosis (Perez-Velez and Marais, 2012; Lewinsohn et al., 2017; Ahmed et al., 2020). In pediatric primary TB, consolidation may be present and can be misdiagnosed as bacterial pneumonia; however, massive consolidation is rare (GriffithRichards et al., 2007). Primary pulmonary TB should be considered in children with lung consolidation that is unresponsive to antibiotics, despite negative IGRA and TB exposure history.

Keywords: Acid-fast bacilli; Air bronchogram; Consolidation; Progressive primary tuberculosis; Ziehl-Neelsen stain.