| Literature DB >> 36195738 |
Angela Lau1, Christopher Lin2, James Barrie3, Christopher Winter3, Gavin Armstrong3, Mary Lou Egedahl1, Alexander Doroshenko1, Courtney Heffernan1, Leyla Asadi1, Dina Fisher4, Catherine Paulsen1, Jalal Moolji1, Yiming Huang1, Richard Long5.
Abstract
Subclinical pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) is a recently described intermediate state of great interest, but about which little is known. This study sought to describe and compare the frequency of key radiologic features of subclinical PTB on chest radiograph (CXR) versus computed tomographic scan (CT), and to interpret the clinical and public health relevance of the differences. Diagnostic CXRs and CT scans of the thorax and neck in a 16-year cohort of subclinical PTB patients in Canada were re-acquired and read by two independent readers and arbitrated by a third reader. Logistic regression models were fit to determine how likely CXR features can be detected by CT scan versus CXR after adjustment for age and sex. Among 296 subclinical patients, CXRs were available in 286 (96.6%) and CT scans in 94 (32.9%). CXR features in patients with and without CT scans were comparable. Lung cavitation was 4.77 times (95% CI 1.95-11.66), endobronchial spread 19.36 times (95% CI 8.05-46.52), and moderate/far-advanced parenchymal disease 3.23 times (95% CI 1.66-6.30), more common on CT scan than CXR. We conclude that the extent to which CXRs under-detect key radiologic features in subclinical PTB is substantial. This may have public health and treatment implications.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36195738 PMCID: PMC9531232 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-21016-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Demographic and mycobacteriologic features in HIV-seronegative, new-active pulmonary tuberculosis patients by symptom status; reason for assessment of subclinical patients
| Features | Total | PTB patients | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subclinical | Clinical | |||
| 1391 | 296 | 1095 | ||
| 0.098 | ||||
| 15–64 | 1009 (72.5) | 226 (76.4) | 783 (71.5) | |
| > 64 | 382 (27.5) | 70 (23.6) | 312 (28.5) | |
| 0.066 | ||||
| Male | 789 (56.7) | 154 (52.0) | 635 (58.0) | |
| Female | 602 (43.3) | 142 (48.0) | 460 (42.0) | |
| 0.00006 | ||||
| Canadian-born | 240 (17.3) | 28 (9.5) | 212 (19.4) | |
| Foreign-born | 1151 (82.7) | 268 (90.5) | 883 (80.6) | |
| < 0.00001 | ||||
| Positive | 648 (46.6) | 28 (9.5) | 620 (56.6) | |
| Negative | 743 (53.4) | 268 (90.5) | 475 (43.4) | |
| 0.0001 | ||||
| Mean ± SD | 14.9 ± 9.0 | 20.9 ± 9.1 | 13.3 ± 8.3 | |
| Median (IQR) | 13.3 (8.5–18.6) | 18.0 (14.5–25.0) | 11.9 (7.0–17.0) | |
| 0.890 | ||||
| Yes | 144 (10.4) | 30 (10.1) | 114 (10.4) | |
| No | 1247 (89.6) | 266 (89.9) | 981 (89.6) | |
| Immigration referral | 144 (48.6) | |||
| EPTB | 44 (14.9) | N/A | ||
| Positive TST/IGRA | 35 (11.8) | |||
| Miscellaneous | 73 (24.7) | |||
Abbreviations: HIV human immunodeficiency virus; PTB pulmonary tuberculosis; SD standard deviation; IQR interquartile range; EPTB extrapulmonary tuberculosis; TST tuberculin skin test; IGRA interferon gamma release assay; NA not applicable.
The patients reported in Table 1 are a subset of patients previously reported (see reference #6).
†If multiple pre-treatment specimens were culture-positive, the average time to culture-positivity was used.
‡Resistance to one or more first-line anti-tuberculosis drugs.
§See text for a full description of the reason for assessment.
Expert inter-reader variability of subclinical PTB chest radiograph and computed tomogram interpretation
| Imaging modality | Feature† | Agreement | Kappa Statistic | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chest radiograph | Category Laterality Cavitation Endobronchial Spread Lymph Node Enlargement Extent of Disease | Substantial Substantial Moderate Moderate Substantial Substantial | 0.745 0.723 0.483 0.441 0.657 0.681 | 0.672–0.819 0.655–0.791 0.317–0.649 0.257–0.645 0.401–0.914 0.604–0.758 |
| Computed tomogram | Category Laterality Cavitation Endobronchial Spread Lymph Node Enlargement Extent of Disease | Almost perfect Almost perfect Almost perfect Moderate Substantial Almost perfect | 0.829 0.882 0.975 0.504 0.789 0.800 | 0.713–0.944 0.799–0.966 0.928–1.000 0.340–0.667 0.640–0.938 0.700–0.899 |
The kappa statistic for the chest radiograph features have been previously reported (see reference #6).
† See text for definition of chest radiographic and computed tomographic features; see reference #13 and the online Supplement 3 for definition of extent of disease.
Chest radiographic features of subclinical pulmonary tuberculosis in patients with and without a computed tomographic scan
| Feature | Total | Subclinical PTB Cases | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CXR Alone | CXR and CT | |||
| 286 | 192 | 94 | ||
| Typical | 195 (68.2) | 133 (69.3) | 62 (66.0) | 0.037 |
| Atypical | 41 (14.3) | 21 (10.9) | 20 (21.3) | |
| Normal | 50 (17.5) | 38 (19.8) | 12 (12.8) | |
| Unilateral disease | 162 (56.6) | 106 (55.2) | 58 (61.7) | 0.438 |
| Bilateral disease | 70 (24.5) | 46 (24.0) | 22 (23.4) | |
| Normal | 54 (18.9) | 40 (20.8) | 14 (18.9) | |
| Yes | 19 (6.6) | 12 (6.3) | 7 (7.4) | 0.703 |
| No | 267 (93.3) | 180 (93.8) | 87 (92.6) | |
| Yes | 19 (6.7) | 12 (6.9) | 7 (7.4) | 0.728 |
| No | 264 (93.3) | 177 (93.7) | 87 (92.6) | |
| Yes | 9 (3.1) | 4 (2.1) | 5 (5.3) | 0.16 |
| No | 277 (96.9) | 188 (97.9) | 89 (94.7) | |
| Normal | 54 (18.9) | 40 (20.8) | 14 (14.9) | 0.179 |
| Minimal | 193 (67.5) | 131 (68.2) | 62 (66.0) | |
| Moderately advanced | 37 (12.9) | 20 (10.4) | 17 (18.1) | |
| Far advanced | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Miliary | 2 (0.7) | 1 (0.5) | 1 (1.1) | |
Abbreviations: PTB pulmonary tuberculosis; CXR chest x-ray; CT computed tomography.
The proportions of all patients (“total” column) with the features have been previously reported (see reference #6).
† Information on acinar shadows on the chest radiograph was unavailable in three patients.
Figure 1Adult culture-positive pulmonary tuberculosis patients in the Province of Alberta, Canada, 2005–2020. Chest radiographs were performed in all but 10 of the HIV-seronegative, new active subclinical patients and all 41 of the HIV-seronegative relapse/retreatment subclinical PTB patients. CT scans were performed in 94 of the 286 HIV-seronegative new active subclinical PTB patients with chest radiographs and 4 of the 41 HIV-seronegative relapse/retreatment subclinical PTB patients with chest radiographs. This figure is an adaptation and extension of a previously reported figure. (see reference #6).
Detection of radiologic features among subclinical PTB patients by diagnostic imaging modality
| Feature | Radiograph | CT Scan | OR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 94 | 94 | |||
| Typical | 62 (66.0) | 69 (73.4) | ||
| Atypical | 20 (21.3) | 20 (21.3) | 1.36 (0.72–2.55) | 0.339 |
| Normal | 12 (12.8) | 5 (5.3) | ||
| Unilateral | 58 (61.7) | 52 (55.3) | ||
| Bilateral | 22 (23.4) | 36 (38.3) | 1.95 (1.01–3.74) | 0.046 |
| Normal | 14 (18.9) | 6 (6.4) | ||
| Yes | 7 (7.4) | 26 (27.7) | 4.77 (1.95–11.66) | 0.001 |
| No | 87 (92.6) | 68 (72.3) | ||
| Yes | 7 (7.4) | 56 (59.6) | 19.36 (8.05–46.52) | < 0.001 |
| No | 87 (92.6) | 38 (40.4) | ||
| Yes | 5 (5.3) | 21 (22.3) | 6.56 (2.15–20.02) | 0.001 |
| No | 89 (94.7) | 73 (77.7) | ||
| Normal | 14 (14.9) | 7 (7.4) | ||
| Minimal | 62 (66.0) | 47 (50.0) | ||
| Moderately ADVANCED | 17 (18.1) | 35 (37.2) | 3.23 (1.66–6.30) | 0.001 |
| Far advanced | 1 (1.1) | |||
| Miliary | 1 (1.1) | 4 (4.3) | ||
Abbreviations: PTB pulmonary tuberculosis; CT computed tomography; OR odds ratio; CI confidence interval.
Adjusted for age and sex.
Figure 2(A,B,C) Frontal chest radiograph (A) and thin Sect. (1.0 mm) coronal reformat computed tomographic (CT) images (B and C) in a patient diagnosed with smear-negative, culture-positive subclinical pulmonary tuberculosis on August 28, 2007. A small cavity is visible on CT scan but not on chest radiograph; the abnormality in the right upper lobe is stable over several months. (D,E,F) Frontal chest radiograph (D), a multiplanar reformation (MPR) coronal CT image (3 mm) (E) and a 1 mm transverse CT image through the upper thorax (F) in a patient diagnosed with smear-negative, culture-positive subclinical pulmonary tuberculosis on July 26, 2012. Cavitation is visible on CT scan but not on chest radiograph; endobronchial spread is more visible on CT scan than on chest radiograph. (G,H,I) Frontal chest radiograph (G) and 3 mm transverse CT images at the level of the aortic arch (H) and main carina (I) in a patient diagnosed with smear-positive, culture-positive subclinical pulmonary tuberculosis on November 24, 2015. An enlarged, centrally necrotic, lymph node is visible in the right paratracheal area (H) and a borderline enlarged centrally necrotic lymph node is visible just anterior to the main carina (I) on CT scan; neither was clearly visible or reported on chest radiograph.
Figure 3Computed tomographic (CT) scan results in patients who had normal chest radiographs (patients #1–12) and in patients whose chest radiographs were abnormal but showed no lung parenchymal abnormality (patients #13 and 14). Positive findings are indicated by a black box . Back-shaded columns (3, 5, 6, 7) refer to patients who had a CT scan of the neck. Patients #3, 5, 6, 7, and 10 had concomitant cervical lymph node TB. Patients #9 and #12 were close contacts of smear-positive clinical patients. In Patient #8 (i.e. the patient whose chest radiograph was reported as normal and whose CT was reported as showing moderately advanced cavitary disease) the chest radiograph and CT scan were performed on the same day. Abbreviations: CXR chest X-ray; MOD moderately; ADV advanced.