AI Article Synopsis

  • Tuberculosis (TB) remains a significant global health issue, with a study in China investigating the occurrence of concurrent pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) and extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB).
  • The research analyzed data from nearly 439,000 TB patients over several years and identified PTB as the most common diagnosis, with over 29% of cases showing concurrent PTB and EPTB, particularly tuberculous pleurisy.
  • Results indicated variations in associations of concurrent PTB-EPTB by gender and age, highlighting the importance for clinicians to screen for these cases to enhance patient treatment outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Tuberculosis (TB), a multisystemic disease with protean presentation, remains a major global health problem. Although concurrent pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) and extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) cases are commonly observed clinically, knowledge regarding concurrent PTB-EPTB is limited. Here, a large-scale multicenter observational study conducted in China aimed to study the epidemiology of concurrent PTB-EPTB cases by diagnostically defining TB types and then implementing association rules analysis.

Methods: The retrospective study was conducted at 21 hospitals in 15 provinces in China and included all inpatients with confirmed TB diagnoses admitted from Jan 2011 to Dec 2017. Association rules analysis was conducted for cases with concurrent PTB and various types of EPTB using the Apriori algorithm.

Results: Evaluation of 438,979TB inpatients indicated PTB was the most commonly diagnosed (82.05%) followed by tuberculous pleurisy (23.62%). Concurrent PTB-EPTB was found in 129,422 cases (29.48%) of which tuberculous pleurisy was the most common concurrent EPTB type observed. The multivariable logistic regression models demonstrated that odds ratios of concurrent PTB-EPTB cases varied by gender and age group. For PTB cases with concurrent EPTB, the strongest association was found between PTB and concurrent bronchial tuberculosis (lift = 1.09). For EPTB cases with concurrent PTB, the strongest association was found between pharyngeal/laryngeal tuberculosis and concurrent PTB (lift = 1.11). Confidence and lift values of concurrent PTB-EPTB cases varied with gender and age.

Conclusions: Numerous concurrent PTB-EPTB case types were observed, with confidence and lift values varying with gender and age. Clinicians should screen for concurrent PTB-EPTB in order to improve treatment outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10442182PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/5562495DOI Listing

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