AI Article Synopsis

  • Pulmonary nocardiosis is an uncommon infection that can spread to other parts of the body, and the study analyzed CT scan results and outcomes in patients diagnosed with this condition over a 22-year period.
  • Of the 75 patients studied, 18.7% had cases that spread to other areas, with brain and soft tissue involvement being common, and these disseminated cases were more likely to show certain CT findings like cavitation and pleural effusion.
  • Factors like having cancer, using steroid medication, and specific CT patterns were linked to higher death rates within 12 months, while the spread of the infection itself did not significantly influence survival outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Pulmonary nocardiosis is a rare opportunistic infection with occasional systemic dissemination. This study aimed to investigate the computed tomography (CT) findings and prognosis of pulmonary nocardiosis associated with dissemination.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients diagnosed with pulmonary nocardiosis between March 2001 and September 2023. We reviewed the chest CT findings and categorized them based on the dominant CT findings as consolidation, nodules and/or masses, consolidation with multiple nodules, and nodular bronchiectasis. We compared chest CT findings between localized and disseminated pulmonary nocardiosis and identified significant prognostic factors associated with 12-month mortality using multivariate Cox regression analysis.

Results: Pulmonary nocardiosis was diagnosed in 75 patients, of whom 14 (18.7%) had dissemination, including involvement of the brain in 9 (64.3%) cases, soft tissue in 3 (21.4%) cases and positive blood cultures in 3 (21.4%) cases. Disseminated pulmonary nocardiosis showed a higher frequency of cavitation (64.3% vs. 32.8%, = 0.029) and pleural effusion (64.3% vs. 29.5%, = 0.014) compared to localized infection. The 12-month mortality rate was 25.3%. The presence of dissemination was not a significant prognostic factor (hazard ratio [HR], 0.80; confidence interval [CI], 0.23-2.75; = 0.724). Malignancy (HR, 9.73; CI, 2.32-40.72; = 0.002), use of steroid medication (HR, 3.72; CI, 1.33-10.38; = 0.012), and a CT pattern of consolidation with multiple nodules (HR, 4.99; CI, 1.41-17.70; = 0.013) were associated with higher mortality rates.

Conclusion: Pulmonary nocardiosis with dissemination showed more frequent cavitation and pleural effusion compared to cases without dissemination, but dissemination alone did not affect the mortality rate of pulmonary nocardiosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10963173PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3346/jkms.2024.39.e107DOI Listing

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