Chest radiographic findings of pulmonary tuberculosis in severely immunocompromised patients with the human immunodeficiency virus
View/ Open
Date
2012-06Author
Kisembo, H. N.
Boon, S. Den
Davis, J. L.
Okello, R.
Worodria, W.
Cattamanchi, A.
Huang, L.
Kawooya, M. G.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objective: We describe chest radiograph (CXR) findings in a population with a high
prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and tuberculosis (TB) in order to
identify radiological features associated with TB; to compare CXR features between
HIV-seronegative and HIV-seropositive patients with TB; and to correlate CXR findings
with CD4 T-cell count.
Methods: Consecutive adult patients admitted to a national referral hospital with a
cough of duration of 2 weeks or longer underwent diagnostic evaluation for TB and
other pneumonias, including sputum examination and mycobacterial culture,
bronchoscopy and CXR. Two radiologists blindly reviewed CXRs using a standardised
interpretation form.
Results: Smear or culture-positive TB was diagnosed in 214 of 403 (53%) patients.
Median CD4+ T-cell count was 50 cells mm–3 [interquartile range (IQR) 14–150]. TB
patients were less likely than non-TB patients to have a normal CXR (12% vs 20%,
p50.04), and more likely than non-TB patients to have a diffuse pattern of opacities
(75% vs 60%, p50.003), reticulonodular opacities (45% vs 12%, p,0.001), nodules
(14% vs 6%, p50.008) or cavities (18% vs 7%, p50.001). HIV-seronegative TB patients
more often had consolidation (70% vs 42%, p50.007) and cavities (48% vs 13%,
p,0.001) than HIV-seropositive TB patients. TB patients with a CD4+ T-cell count of
#50 cells mm–3 less often had consolidation (33% vs 54%, p50.006) and more often
had hilar lymphadenopathy (30% vs 16%, p50.03) compared with patients with CD4
51–200 cells mm–3.
Conclusion: Although different CXR patterns can be seen in TB and non-TB pneumonias there is considerable overlap in features, especially among HIVseropositive and severely immunosuppressed patients. Providing clinical and
immunological information to the radiologist might improve the accuracy of
radiographic diagnosis of TB.