Abstract

BackgroundUntil now, the influential factors associated with pleural adenosine deaminase (ADA) activity among children remain unclear. This retrospective study was therefore conducted aiming to investigate the factors associated with negative pleural ADA results in the diagnosis of childhood pleural tuberculosis (TB).MethodsBetween January 2006 and December 2019, children patients with definite or possible pleural TB were recruited for potential analysis. Then, patients were stratified into two categories: negative pleural ADA results group (experimental group, ≤40 U/L) and positive pleural ADA results group (control group, > 40 U/L). Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to estimate risk factors for negative pleural ADA results.ResultsA total of 84 patients with pleural TB were recruited and subsequently classified as experimental (n = 17) and control groups (n = 67). Multivariate analysis (Hosmer–Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test: χ2 = 1.881, df = 6, P = 0.930) revealed that variables, such as chest pain (age-adjusted OR = 0.0510, 95% CI: 0.004, 0.583), pleural total protein (≤45.3 g/L, age-adjusted OR = 27.7, 95% CI: 2.5, 307.7), pleural lactate dehydrogenase (LDH, ≤505 U/L, age-adjusted OR = 59.9, 95% CI: 4.2, 857.2) and blood urea nitrogen (≤3.2 mmol/L, age-adjusted OR = 32.0, 95% CI: 2.4, 426.9), were associated with negative pleural ADA results when diagnosing childhood pleural TB.ConclusionOur findings demonstrated that chest pain, pleural total protein, pleural LDH, and blood urea nitrogen were associated with a negative pleural ADA result for the diagnosis of pleural TB among children. When interpreting pleural ADA levels in children with these characteristics, a careful clinical assessment is required for the pleural TB diagnosis.

Highlights

  • Childhood tuberculosis (TB) remains a serious health threat

  • Cruz AT et al found that pleural fluid cultures for TB were positive in 56% of enrolled childhood TB cases, and no case had acid-fast bacilli (AFB) smear-positive pleural fluid; in a previous study, we found 5.4% of children with pleural TB were AFB smear-positive, 14.3% were PCR positive, and 36.6% were culture-positive [7]

  • The threshold of pleural adenosine deaminase (ADA) for childhood pleural TB was selected based on general expert opinions and most studies [13, 21, 22] and patients were stratified into two categories: negative pleural ADA results group and positive pleural ADA results group

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Summary

Introduction

Childhood tuberculosis (TB) remains a serious health threat. Thoracoscopy has been proven to be a sensitive and safe tool for the detection of childhood pleural TB, it has limited usefulness due to a invasive procedure [9]. Some novel TB assays, such as Xpert, have relatively limited clinical use in the diagnosis of childhood pleural TB [10, 11]. The influential factors associated with pleural adenosine deaminase (ADA) activity among children remain unclear. This retrospective study was conducted aiming to investigate the factors associated with negative pleural ADA results in the diagnosis of childhood pleural tuberculosis (TB)

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