| Literature DB >> 35547228 |
Qiao Liu1, Wenxin Yan1, Runqing Liu2, Ershu Bo3, Jue Liu1, Min Liu1.
Abstract
Background: The estimated global latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) burden indicates a large reservoir of population at risk of developing active tuberculosis (TB). Previous studies suggested diabetes mellitus (DM) might associate with LTBI, though still controversial. We aimed to systematically assess the association between DM and LTBI.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes mellitus; meta-analysis; prediabetes; systematic review; tuberculosis infection
Year: 2022 PMID: 35547228 PMCID: PMC9082645 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.899821
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
FIGURE 1Flowchart of the study selection. DM, diabetes mellitus; LTBI, latent tuberculosis infection.
Characteristics of the studies included for meta-analysis.
| References | Location | Design | Sample size | Population | Proportion of male | DM | DM | NonDM | NonDM | Risk of bias |
| Arnedo-Pena et al. ( | Spain | Cohort study | 198 | Contacts | 50.6% | 1 | 3 | 17 | 177 | Low |
| Salindri et al. ( | United States | Cross-sectional study | 132 | Community residents | 44.7% | 9 | 89 | 5 | 29 | Moderate |
| Barron et al. ( | United States | Cross-sectional study | 4958 | Community residents | 47.8% | 65 | 500 | 152 | 3145 | Low |
| Bennett et al. ( | United States | Cross-sectional study | 4187 | Refugees | 50.5% | 76 | 100 | 747 | 3264 | Low |
| Chan-Yeung et al. ( | HK, China | Cross-sectional study | 3605 | Residents in old age homes | 27.5% | 423 | 1245 | 383 | 1554 | Moderate |
| El-Sokkary et al. ( | Egypt | Cross-sectional study | 132 | Health care workers | 22.7% | 20 | 10 | 18 | 84 | Moderate |
| Hensel et al. ( | United States | Cross-sectional study | 681 | Refugees | 55.0% | 23 | 31 | 104 | 302 | Low |
| Jackson et al. ( | United Kingdom | Cross-sectional study | 9157 | Community residents | 50.0% | 238 | 518 | 2296 | 6105 | Low |
| Khawcharoenporn et al. ( | Thailand | Cohort study | 150 | HIV-infected patients | 52.7% | 2 | 4 | 34 | 110 | Low |
| Kubiak et al. ( | India | Cross-sectional study | 1113 | Household contacts | 35.2% | 44 | 25 | 561 | 483 | Low |
| Lin et al. ( | Taiwan, China | Cross-sectional study | 3401 | community residents | 46.4% | 623 | 2325 | 44 | 409 | Low |
| Martinez et al. ( | United States | Cross-sectional study | 4215 | Population | 49.2% | 59 | 717 | 82 | 1916 | Low |
| Nanth et al. ( | Malaysia | Cross-sectional study | 763 | Non-communicable disease patients from clinic | 49.1% | 115 | 289 | 105 | 254 | Low |
| Shivakumar et al. ( | India | Cross-sectional study | 639 | Household contacts | 43.6% | 47 | 16 | 321 | 81 | Low |
| Shu et al. ( | Taiwan, China | Cross-sectional study | 427 | Adult patients receiving long-term dialysis | 53.0% | 24 | 84 | 67 | 252 | Moderate |
| Stockbridge et al. ( | United States | Cross-sectional study | 3997986 | Household contacts | 49.4% | 11225 | 222,637 | 161857 | 3602267 | Low |
| Suwanpimolkul et al. ( | United States | Cross-sectional study | 23018 | Individuals seeking medical attention at the Tuberculosis Clinic | Unknown | 1158 | 332 | 16698 | 4830 | Low |
| Ting et al. ( | Taiwan, China | Cross-sectional study | 1018 | In-patients and out- patients | 52.5% | 48 | 99 | 248 | 623 | Low |
| Wang et al. ( | Taiwan, China | Cohort study | 583 | Household contacts | 33.3% | 8 | 9 | 168 | 398 | Low |
| Yeon et al. ( | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 1655 | Healthcare workers | 25.6% | 4 | 8 | 263 | 1376 | Moderate |
DM, diabetes mellitus; LTBI, latent tuberculosis infection.
FIGURE 2Forest plots for the association between DM/pre-DM and the risk of LTBI. (A) Association between DM and the risk of LTBI in cohort studies. (B) Association between DM and the risk of LTBI in cross-sectional studies. (C) Association between pre-DM and the risk of LTBI. (D) Association between DM and the risk of LTBI with adjusted ORs. DM, diabetes mellitus; LTBI, latent tuberculosis infection.
Pooled effect for cohort and cross-sectional studies, and subgroup analysis for cross-sectional studies by population group, study location, sample size, proportion of male, study quality.
| No. studies | Odds ratio |
| Weight (%) | |||
|
| ||||||
| Cohort studies | 3 | 1.62 (1.02, 2.56) | <0.1% | 0.795 | . | |
| Cross-sectional studies | 17 | 1.55 (1.30, 1.84) | 89.5% | <0.001 | . | |
|
| < 0.001 | |||||
| Community residents | 5 | 1.77 (1.16, 2.70) | 87.9% | <0.001 | 30.70 | |
| Contacts | 3 | 1.12 (0.88, 1.43) | 35.2% | 0.214 | 18.33 | |
| Refugees | 2 | 2.88 (1.93, 4.29) | 39.4% | 0.199 | 11.48 | |
| Elderly/patients with other chronic diseases | 5 | 1.13 (0.95, 1.35) | 61.7% | 0.034 | 35.24 | |
| Health care worker | 2 | 5.27 (1.52, 18.20) | 63.1% | 0.100 | 4.25 | |
|
| <0.001 | |||||
| Europe | 1 | 1.22 (1.04, 1.43) | 8.37 | |||
| Asia | 8 | 1.33 (1.03, 1.72) | 71.1% | 0.001 | 44.49 | |
| North America | 7 | 1.69 (1.25, 2.29) | 93.8% | <0.001 | 44.56 | |
| Africa | 1 | 9.33 (3.74, 23.28) | 2.57 | |||
|
| 0.001 | |||||
| 100–1,000 | 6 | 1.41 (0.78, 2.55) | 82.8% | <0.001 | 24.89 | |
| 1,000–5,000 | 8 | 1.99 (1.49, 2.66) | 83.3% | <0.001 | 49.11 | |
| >5,000 | 3 | 1.11 (1.03, 1.20) | 47.2% | 0.151 | 26.00 | |
|
| 0.010 | |||||
| <40% | 4 | 2.36 (1.19, 4.66) | 82.6% | 0.001 | 17.76 | |
| 40–50% | 7 | 1.42 (0.99, 2.05) | 91.1% | <0.001 | 42.51 | |
| ≥ 50% | 5 | 1.63 (1.03, 2.57) | 88.8% | <0.001 | 31.12 | |
| Unknown | 1 | 1.01 (0.89, 1.14) | 8.61 | |||
|
| 0.658 | |||||
| Low | 12 | 1.53 (1.25, 1.86) | 91.1% | <0.001 | 80.67 | |
| Moderate | 5 | 1.78 (0.93, 3.42) | 80.7% | <0.001 | 19.33 |
*This effect is Risk Ratio.
FIGURE 3Funnel plot of the studies based on the association between DM and the risk of LTBI. DM, diabetes mellitus; LTBI, latent tuberculosis infection.