Literature DB >> 10597784

Invasive amoebiasis: an emerging parasitic disease in patients infected with HIV in an area endemic for amoebic infection.

C C Hung1, P J Chen, S M Hsieh, J M Wong, C T Fang, S C Chang, M Y Chen.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe the incidence and presentations of invasive amoebiasis (IA) in patients with HIV infection in an area endemic for amoebic infection and to assess the role of the indirect haemagglutination (IHA) assay in the diagnosis of IA in HIV-infected patients.
DESIGN: Retrospective study of 18 cases of IA and HIV infection.
SETTING: A university hospital, the largest centre for management of HIV-associated complications in Taiwan.
METHODS: Medical, microbiological and histopathological records of 296 HIV-infected patients and serological data of IHA assay of 126 HIV-infected patients were reviewed to identify cases of IA from 23 June 1994 to 31 March 1999. An IHA titre > or = 1 : 128 was considered positive. Clinical characteristics of HIV-infected patients with IA and without IA were compared.
RESULTS: Eighteen of the 296 patients (6.1%) with HIV infection were diagnosed with IA: 12 patients were diagnosed with definite IA and six with probable IA. The clinical manifestations included amoebic colitis (13 patients), amoebic liver abscess (nine), both colitis and abscess (four), and pleural effusion (two). IA was the initial presentation of HIV infection in nine patients. Co-infection with other enteric pathogens was diagnosed in six patients with IA. Compared with the 161 patients without IA who were newly diagnosed with HIV infection, the nine patients with IA had a higher median CD4+ lymphocyte count (202 x 10(6)/l versus 33 x 10(6)/l; P = 0.0017), were less likely to be diagnosed with AIDS (55.6% versus 85.4%; P = 0.039), and had fewer concurrent AIDS-defining illnesses (median number 0 versus 2; P = 0.003). Estimated mean survival duration was not significantly different between the two groups (597 days versus 611 days). Fourteen out of 126 patients (11.1%) had an IHA titre > or = 1 : 128. Of the 18 patients diagnosed with IA, 13 had a titre > or = 1 : 128. The sensitivity of IHA assay in the diagnosis of IA was 72.2% (13 out of 18) and the specificity was 99.1% (107 out of 108). The positive predictive value of IHA test for IA of this patient population was 92.9% (13 out of 14) whereas the negative predictive value was 95.5% (107 out of 112).
CONCLUSION: IA is an increasingly important parasitic disease among patients with HIV infection in Taiwan. IHA assay has a good specificity and high negative predictive value in diagnosis of IA.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10597784     DOI: 10.1097/00002030-199912030-00014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS        ISSN: 0269-9370            Impact factor:   4.177


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