Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis Health, Sacramento.
Department of Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.
JAMA Netw Open. 2019 Feb 1;2(2):e187617. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2018.7617.
Recognition of active tuberculosis (TB) in its earliest stages could reduce morbidity and prevent advancement to transmissible disease. Little is published about the occurrence and presentation of sputum culture-negative pulmonary TB (PTB), an early paucibacillary but often underrecognized disease state.
To assess differences between culture-negative and culture-positive PTB regarding occurrence, clinical presentation, radiographic findings, demographics, and comorbidities.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Cross-sectional study in which surveillance data of adult patients with PTB reported to the New York City Department of Health in New York, New York, from 2011 through 2013, ie, years for which demographic, clinical, and radiographic data were collected. Patients were aged 18 years or older, had signs of pulmonary disease, and had mycobacterial sputum culture results; those with HIV coinfection or a TB diagnosis within 2 years prior to presentation were excluded. Culture-negative PTB was defined as clinical and radiographic presentation consistent with TB, 3 negative results on sputum culture, and improvement with antituberculous treatment. The analyses were performed between 2015 and 2016; notably, the proportion of reported patients with culture-negative PTB has remained consistent during the past 2 decades.
The occurrence of culture-negative PTB among all patients with PTB was calculated, and demographics, comorbidities, symptoms, and radiographic findings were compared between culture-negative and culture-positive PTB.
Of the 796 patients with PTB (median [interquartile range] age, 41 [29-54] years; 499 [63%] men) who met criteria for analysis, 116 (15%) had negative results on sputum culture. Patients with culture-negative PTB compared with culture-positive PTB were less frequently male (53% vs 64%; P = .03) and presented with a significantly lower frequency of cough (68% vs 89%; P < .001), weight loss (39% vs 51%; P = .03), and cavitation on both chest radiograph (7% vs 28%; P < .001) and chest computed tomographic scan (26% vs 59%; P < .001).
Given the lack of criterion-standard test confirmation and the relative paucity of symptoms and radiological abnormalities, culture-negative PTB is likely underdiagnosed and its occurrence underestimated globally. Awareness of these findings, enhanced diagnostic approaches, and, ideally, better biomarkers could improve detection and treatment of this early disease and reduce the development of transmissible TB.
在结核病的早期阶段识别出结核病可以降低发病率,并防止其发展为传染性疾病。关于痰培养阴性的肺结核(PTB)的发生和表现,即早期的少菌性但通常未被识别的疾病状态,发表的内容很少。
评估痰培养阴性和阳性 PTB 之间在发病情况、临床表现、影像学发现、人口统计学和合并症方面的差异。
设计、地点和参与者:这是一项横断面研究,对 2011 年至 2013 年期间向纽约市卫生局报告的纽约市成人肺结核患者的监测数据进行了研究,即收集了人口统计学、临床和影像学数据的年份。患者年龄在 18 岁或以上,有肺部疾病的迹象,并且有分枝杆菌痰培养结果;那些合并 HIV 感染或在出现症状前 2 年内有结核病诊断的患者被排除在外。痰培养阴性的 PTB 定义为临床和影像学表现符合结核病,痰培养连续 3 次阴性,并且抗结核治疗有效。分析于 2015 年至 2016 年进行;值得注意的是,过去 20 年来,报告的痰培养阴性 PTB 患者比例一直保持稳定。
计算了所有 PTB 患者中痰培养阴性 PTB 的发生率,并比较了痰培养阴性和阳性 PTB 之间的人口统计学、合并症、症状和影像学发现。
在符合分析标准的 796 名 PTB 患者(中位数[四分位间距]年龄,41[29-54]岁;499[63%]为男性)中,有 116 名(15%)痰培养结果为阴性。与痰培养阳性的 PTB 患者相比,痰培养阴性的 PTB 患者中男性比例较低(53%比 64%;P = .03),咳嗽频率显著降低(68%比 89%;P < .001),体重减轻(39%比 51%;P = .03),胸部 X 线和胸部 CT 扫描均出现空洞的频率较低(7%比 28%;P < .001)和(26%比 59%;P < .001)。
鉴于缺乏标准诊断检测的确认以及相对缺乏症状和影像学异常,全球范围内可能存在痰培养阴性 PTB 被漏诊和低估的情况。对这些发现的认识、改进的诊断方法以及理想情况下更好的生物标志物可以提高对这种早期疾病的检测和治疗,减少传染性 TB 的发生。