This study aimed to identify the epidemio-clinic, diagnostic, therapeutic and evolutionary features of genital tuberculosis (GT) among Tunisian women. We conducted a retrospective, descriptive study in the Department of Infectious Diseases at the La Rabta Hospital, Tunisia, over a period of 15 and a half years (January 2000 - June 2014). All patients hospitalized for genital TB were included in the study. The study focused on 47 cases. The average age of patients was 42.2 years. Eighteen women were from rural areas. Tuberculous contact was found in five cases. In all cases, the onset was insidious. Twenty-three patients showed one or several signs of TB infection. Tuberculin intradermal reaction (IDR) test was performed in 35 women (74.8%), it was positive in 26 cases (74%). Thirty-nine patients (83%) had undergone radiological examination using abdomino-pelvis ultrasound and/or CT scan. Diagnostic coelioscopy was performed in 37 cases (75.5%). Anatomopathological examination helped to confirm the diagnosis of GT in 42 cases (89.3%), showing epithelioid and giant-cell granuloma. We identified 21 cases of isolated GT, the remaining 26 cases had peritoneal involvement. All patients received specific antibiotic therapy combining isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide and ethamubutol with an average treatment duration of 12 months. No patient received corticosteroids or secondary surgery. Patients' outcome was favorable in 39 cases, 8 patients were lost to follow-up. Genital tuberculosis is rare, representing only 0.5% of extra-pulmonary tuberculosis, but it accounts for a high prevalence of clinical polymorphism. Diagnostic confirmation is difficult and it is based on bacteriological and/or histological examinations. Diagnosis should be suspected in patients with chronic abdominopelvic symptoms, in women with infertility associated with suggestive epidemioclinical manifestations.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6191266PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2018.30.71.14479DOI Listing

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