| Literature DB >> 19193268 |
Patricia C A M Buijtels1, Marianne A B van-der-Sande, Cas S de-Graaff, Shelagh Parkinson, Henri A Verbrugh, Pieter L C Petit, Dick van-Soolingen.
Abstract
Clinical relevance of nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) isolated from 180 chronically ill patients and 385 healthy controls in Zambia was evaluated to examine the contribution of these isolates to tuberculosis (TB)-like disease. The proportion of NTM-positive sputum samples was significantly higher in the patient group than in controls; 11% and 6%, respectively (p<0.05). NTM-associated lung disease was diagnosed for 1 patient, and a probable diagnosis was made for 3 patients. NTM-positive patients and controls were more likely to report vomiting and diarrhea and were more frequently underweight than the NTM-negative patients and controls. Chest radiographs of NTM-positive patients showed deviations consistent with TB more frequently than those of controls. The most frequently isolated NTM was Mycobacterium avium complex. Multiple, not previously identified mycobacteria (55 of 171 NTM) were isolated from both groups. NTM probably play an important role in the etiology of TB-like diseases in Zambia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19193268 PMCID: PMC2657609 DOI: 10.3201/eid1502.080006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Culture results for 180 hospitalized chronically ill patients and 385 controls, Zambia, August 2002–March 2003*
| Results | Patients | Controls |
|---|---|---|
| Culture exclusively | 60 (33) | 2 (0.5) |
| Culture | 12 (7) | 1 (0.3) |
| Culture exclusively NTM,† no. (%) | 19 (11) | 61 (16) |
| Culture NTM,‡ no. (%) | 31 (17) | 62 (16) |
| 2 sputum or gargle samples cultured | 154 | 383 |
| 2 sputum or gargle samples cultured from NTM-positive person | 29 of 31 NTM-positive patients | 62 of 62 NTM-positive controls |
| 1 NTM-positive culture in NTM-positive person with 2 samples cultured | 22 of 29 NTM-positive patients | 61 of 62 NTM-positive controls |
| 1 NTM-positive cultures in NTM-positive person with 2 samples cultured | 4 of 29 NTM-positive patients | 1 of 62 NTM-positive controls |
| 2 NTM-positive cultures in persons with 2 samples cultured§ | 4 of 154 patients with 2 samples cultured | 1 of 383 controls with 2 samples cultured |
*NTM, nontuberculous mycobacteria. †Proportion of patients with exclusively NTM was comparable with controls (p = 0.2). ‡NTM isolated with or without M. tuberculosis. §Significantly more patients than controls had 2 sputum or gargle cultures positive for NTM (p<0.05).
Data for 4 patients with NTM in 2 consecutive sputum samples and 3 NTM-positive patients from whom 1 of 2 sputum samples contained mycobacteria that could not be identified, Zambia, August 2002–March 2003*
| Patient no. | Isolate from first sputum sample | Isolate from second sputum sample | Ziehl-Neelsen staining | Sex | Age, y | HIV status | Temp, °C | Duration, wk | Chest radiograph result | Died | BMI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1† |
| AFB not identified | 1+ | M | 55 | + | 34.6 | 17 | Suspected TB | Yes | 17 |
| 2† | AFB not identified |
| – | F | 45 | + | 36.1 | 487 | Suspected TB | No | 20 |
| 3 |
|
| – | M | 43 | + | 36.3 | 3 | No pathologic changes | No | 19 |
| 4† |
|
| – | M | 32 | + | 36.8 | 17 | Suspected TB | Yes | 15 |
| 5 | AFB not identified |
| – | F | 50 | – | 36.6 | 8 | No suspected TB | No | 21 |
| 6 |
|
| – | M | 33 | + | 37.4 | 17 | No radiograph | No | 16 |
| 7 |
| – | F | 24 | + | 35.0 | 13 | No pathologic changes | Yes | NK |
*NTM, nontuberculous mycobacteria; Temp, temperature at time of enrollment; Duration, duration of symptoms from time of coming to the hospital to enrollment in the study; BMI, body mass index; AFB, acid-fast bacilli; TB, tuberculosis; NK, not known. All patients had respiratory symptoms. †Patients assumed to have pulmonary NTM disease.
Results from cultures of sputum samples taken from hospitalized chronically ill patients and controls, Zambia, August 2002–March 2003
| Result | Patients, no. (%) | Controls, no. (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Negative | 362 (57) | 1,428 (93) |
|
| 201 (32) | 5 (0.3) |
| 15 (2) | 5 (0.3) | |
|
| 12 (2) | 0 |
|
| 3 (0.5) | 5 (0.3) |
|
| 4 (0.6) | 0 |
|
| 2 (0.3) | 4 (0.3) |
|
| 1 (0.2) | 4 (0.3) |
|
| 1 (0.2) | 3 (0.2) |
|
| 1 (0.2) | 0 |
| Unknown | 13 (2) | 42 (3) |
| Other | 3 (0.5) | 7 (0.5) |
| Unidentified acid-fact bacilli | 32 (5) | 34 (2) |
| Total no. sputum samples | 635 | 1,532 |
*Other Mycobacterium spp. in patients were M. fortuitum, M. neoaurum, and M. simiae. Other Mycobacterium spp. in controls were M. fortuitum, M. asiaticum, M. aurum, and M. conspicuum.
Clinical data for samples obtained from NTM-positive and NTM-negative persons, Zambia, August 2002–March 2003*
| Characteristic | NTM-positive samples | NTM-negative samples | p value | All samples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Persons, no. (%) | 93 (16.5) | 472 (83.5) | – | 565 |
| HIV positive, no. (%) | 41 (45.6) | 174 (38.5) | 0.2 | 215 (39.7) |
| 13 (14.0) | 62 (13.1) | 0.8 | 75 (13.3) | |
| BMI, mean (SD) | 20.2 (4.2) | 20.8 (3.7) | 0.2 | 20.7 (3.8) |
| Underweight, no. (%) | 26 (29.6) | 92 (20.6) | 0.06 | 118 (22.1) |
| Vomited, no. (%) | 8 (8.6) | 18 (3.8) | 0.04 | 26 (4.6) |
| Diarrhea, no. (%) | 12 (12.9) | 11 (2.3) | <0.001 | 23 (4.7) |
| Lymph nodes analyzed, no. (%) | 21 (22.8) | 146 (30.9) | 0.1 | 167 (29.6) |
| Chest radiograph compatible with TB but culture negative for | 5 (26.3) | 28 (7.1) | 0.003 | 33 (8.0) |
| Died, no. (%) | 9 (9.7) | 26 (5.5) | 0.1 | 35 (6.2) |
*NTM, nontuberculous mycobacteria; BMI, body mass index; TB, tuberculosis.
Background characteristics of NTM-positive and NTM-negative persons, Zambia, August 2002–March 2003*
| Characteristic | NTM positive, no. (%) | NTM negative, no. (%) | p value | All persons, no. (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Persons | 93 (16.5) | 472 (83.7) | – | 565 |
| Female | 61 (65.6) | 303 (64.2) | 0.8 | 364 (64.4) |
| Age, y, mean (SD) | 36.7 (13.1) | 34.8 (14.6) | 0.2 | 35.1 (14.4) |
| Farmer | 48 (51.6) | 245 (51.9) | 1.0 | 293 (51.9) |
| Used tap water | 23 (25.0) | 62 (13.2) | 0.004 | 85 (15.1) |
| Used unboiled milk | 15 (16.1) | 62 (13.1) | 0.4 | 77 (13.6) |
| Smoker | 5 (5.7) | 41 (8.9) | 0.3 | 46 (8.4) |
| Used alcohol | 9 (10.3) | 51 (11.2) | 0.8 | 60 (11.0) |
| Hospitalized | 31 (33.3) | 149 (31.6) | 0.7 | 180 (31.9) |
| Previously treated for TB | 9 (9.7) | 28 (5.9) | 0.2 | 37 (6.6) |
*NTM, nontuberculous mycobacteria; TB, tuberculosis.
Crude and adjusted risk factors for isolation of NTM from sputum samples, Zambia, August 2002–March 2003*
| Factor | Univariate analysis, OR (95% CI) | Multivariate analysis, OR (95% CI)† |
|---|---|---|
| Hospitalized | 1.1 (0.7–1.7) | NS |
| Age | 1.3 (0.8–2.5) | NS |
| Sex (female) | 1.1 (0.7–1.7) | NS |
| Underweight (BMI <18) | 1.6 (1.0–2.7) | 1.7 (1.0–2.9) |
| 1.1 (0.6–2.0) | NS | |
| Previous treatment for TB | 1.7 (0.8–3.7) | NS |
| HIV positive | 1.3 (0.8–2.1) | NS |
| Used tap water | 2.2 (1.3–3.8) | 2.0 (1.1–3.5) |
| Used alcohol | 0.9 (0.4–1.9) | NS |
| Smoker | 0.6 (0.2–1.6) | NS |
| Used unboiled milk | 1.3 (0.7–2.3) | NS |
| Farmer | 1.0 (0.6–1.5) | NS |
| Chest radiograph compatible with TB but culture negative for | 4.7 (1.6–13.9) | NS |
*NTM, nontuberculous mycobacteria; OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; NS, not significant; BMI, body mass index; TB, tuberculosis. †Stepwise backward elimination.