Literature DB >> 8546552

Lack of usefulness of radiographic screening for pulmonary disease in asymptomatic HIV-infected adults. Pulmonary Complications of HIV Infection Study Group.

R F Schneider1, N I Hansen, M J Rosen, P A Kvale, W J Fulkerson, P Goodman, L Meiselman, J Glassroth, L B Reichman, J M Wallace, P C Hopewell.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the use of chest radiographs in the screening of asymptomatic adults infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
METHODS: A prospective, multicenter study of the pulmonary complications of HIV infection in a community-based cohort of persons with and without HIV infection. The subjects included 1065 HIV-seropositive subjects without the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome at the time of enrollment: 790 homosexual men, 226 injection drug users, and 49 women with heterosexually acquired infection. Frontal and lateral chest radiographs were performed at 3-, 6-, and 12-month intervals, CD4 lymphocyte measurements at 3- and 6-month intervals, tuberculin and mumps skin tests at 12-month intervals, and medical histories and physical examinations at 3- and 6-month intervals. Pulmonary diagnoses that occurred within 2 months following each radiograph were analyzed and correlated with the radiographic results.
RESULTS: Evaluable screening chest radiographs (5263) were performed in HIV-seropositive subjects while they were asymptomatic; of these, 5140 (98%) were classified as normal and 123 (2%) as abnormal. A new pulmonary diagnosis was identified within 2 months following a screening radiograph in 55 subjects. Only 11 of these subjects had abnormal radiographs; the sensitivity of the radiograph was 20%. The sensitivity was similarly low at baseline, within each transmission category, and in subjects whose CD4 lymphocyte counts were less than 0.2 x 10(9)/L (200/microL). The types of pulmonary diseases that occurred were similar in the subjects with normal and abnormal screening radiographs.
CONCLUSION: Screening chest radiography in asymptomatic HIV-infected adults is unwarranted because the diagnostic yield is low.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8546552

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-9926


  2 in total

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