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The epidemiology of extrapulmonary tuberculosis in China: A large-scale multi-center observational study.

Authors :
Wanli Kang
Jiajia Yu
Jian Du
Song Yang
Hongyan Chen
Jianxiong Liu
Jinshan Ma
Mingwu Li
Jingmin Qin
Wei Shu
Peilan Zong
Yi Zhang
Yongkang Dong
Zhiyi Yang
Zaoxian Mei
Qunyi Deng
Pu Wang
Wenge Han
Meiying Wu
Ling Chen
Xinguo Zhao
Lei Tan
Fujian Li
Chao Zheng
Hongwei Liu
Xinjie Li
Ertai A
Yingrong Du
Fenglin Liu
Wenyu Cui
Quanhong Wang
Xiaohong Chen
Junfeng Han
Qingyao Xie
Yanmei Feng
Wenyu Liu
Peijun Tang
Jianyong Zhang
Jian Zheng
Dawei Chen
Xiangyang Yao
Tong Ren
Yan Li
Yuanyuan Li
Lei Wu
Qiang Song
Mei Yang
Jian Zhang
Yuanyuan Liu
Shuliang Guo
Kun Yan
Xinghua Shen
Dan Lei
Yanli Zhang
Xiaofeng Yan
Liang Li
Shenjie Tang
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 15, Iss 8, p e0237753 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2020.

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) remains a serious global public health problem in the present. TB also affects other sites (extrapulmonary tuberculosis, EPTB), and accounts for a significant proportion of tuberculosis cases worldwide. In order to comprehensively understand epidemiology of EBTB in China, and improve early diagnosis and treatment, we conducted a large-scale multi-center observational study to assess the demographic data and the prevalence of common EPTB inpatients, and further evaluate the prevalence of EPTB concurrent with Pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) and the associations between multiple EPTB types and gender-age group in China. All consecutive ageā‰„15yr inpatients with a confirmed diagnosis of EPTB during the period from January 2011 to December 2017 were included in the study. The descriptive statistical analysis included median and quartile measurements for continuous variables, and frequencies and proportions with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for categorical variables. Multinomial logistic regression analysis was used to compare the association of multiple EPTB types between age group and gender. The results showed that the proportion of 15-24 years and 25-34 years in EPTB inpatients were the most and the ratio of male: female was 1.51. Approximately 70% of EPTB inpatients were concurrent with PTB or other types of EPTB. The most common of EPTB was tuberculous pleurisy (50.15%), followed by bronchial tuberculosis (14.96%), tuberculous lymphadenitis of the neck (7.24%), tuberculous meningitis (7.23%), etc. It was found that many EPTB inpatients concurrent with PTB. The highest prevalence of EPTB concurrent with PTB was pharyngeal/laryngeal tuberculosis (91.31%), followed by bronchial tuberculosis (89.52%), tuberculosis of hilar lymph nodes (79.52%), tuberculosis of mediastinal lymph nodes (79.13%), intestinal tuberculosis (72.04%), tuberculous pleurisy (65.31%) and tuberculous meningitis (62.64%), etc. The results from EPTB concurrent with PTB suggested that females EPTB inpatients were less likely to be at higher risk of concurrent PTB (aOR = 0.819, 95%CI:0.803-0.835) after adjusted by age. As age increasing, the trend risk of concurrent PTB decreased (aOR = 0.994, 95%CI: 0.989-0.999) after adjusted by gender. Our study demonstrated that the common EPTB were tuberculous pleurisy, bronchial tuberculosis, tuberculous lymphadenitis of the neck, tuberculous meningitis, etc. A majority of patients with pharyngeal/laryngeal tuberculosis, bronchial tuberculosis, tuberculosis of hilar/mediastinal lymph nodes, intestinal tuberculosis, tuberculous pleurisy, tuberculous meningitis, etc. were concurrent with PTB. Female EPTB inpatients were less likely to be at higher risk of concurrent PTB, and as age increasing, the trend risk of concurrent PTB decreased. The clinicians should be alert to the presence of concurrent tuberculosis in EPTB, and all suspected cases of EPTB should be assessed for concomitant PTB to determine whether the case is infectious and to help for early diagnosis and treatment.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
15
Issue :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.74c777304d26467eb44be78713d35afa
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237753