Literature DB >> 22624407

Time trend and clinical pattern of extrapulmonary tuberculosis in Serbia, 1993-2007.

Dragica P Pesut1, Milica V Bulajić, Aleksandar R Lesić.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND/AIM: Increased incidence of extrapulmonary tuberculosis (XPTB) is reported worldwide. Serbia is a country in socio-economic transition period with low-middle HIV prevalence and intermediate-to-low tuberculosis (TB) incidence rate, 100% directly observed treatment (DOT) coverage, and mandatory BCGC vaccination at birth. The aim of the study was to examine the incidence trend and clinical features of XPTB in Serbia during a 15-year period.
METHODS: This retrospective observational study included XPTB cases diagnosed in the period between 1st January 1993 and 31st Decembre 2007, according to the reports of the National Referral Institute of Lung Diseases and Tuberculosis in Belgrade and Central Tuberculosis Register. Population estimates with extrapolations were based on 1991 and 2002 census data.
RESULTS: While the overall TB incidence rate showed a slight, not significant decreasing trend (p = 0.535), a significant increase was found for XPTB (y = 1.7996 + 0.089x; R2 = 0.4141; p = 0.01). A total of 2,858 XPTB cases (newly diagnosed and 10% relapses) gave an average age specific incidence rate of 2.51/100,000 population (95% confidence interval, SD = 0.6182) with 8.9% annual increase. The male-to-female ratio was 0.54. Lymph nodes were most frequently affected site (48.5%) followed by genitourinary (20.5%), pleural (12%), and osseo-arthicular (10.3%) TB. Treatment outcome was successful in 88.29% of patients (cured and completed), 3.64% died, 5.18% interrupted, 0.57% displaced, and 2.3% unknown.
CONCLUSION: Increasing trend of XPTB incidence rate may be a result of increased morbidity due to still present risk factors, possible higher detection rate in Serbia and better notification. A high coverage of newborns with BCG vaccination at birth might contribute to a decreased number and rare XPTB cases in children.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22624407

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vojnosanit Pregl        ISSN: 0042-8450            Impact factor:   0.168


  2 in total

1.  First reported case of fulminant TB with progression of infection from lungs to the genitourinary region.

Authors:  Tatjana Adzic-Vukicevic; Aleksandra Barac; Aleksandra Dudvarski Ilic; Radmila Jankovic; Jovan Hadzi-Djokic; Dragica Pesut
Journal:  Rev Inst Med Trop Sao Paulo       Date:  2017-04-13       Impact factor: 1.846

2.  Latent tuberculosis infection in foreign-born communities: Import vs. transmission in The Netherlands derived through mathematical modelling.

Authors:  Hester Korthals Altes; Serieke Kloet; Frank Cobelens; Martin Bootsma
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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