Abstract

BackgroundIt remains challenging to differentiate tuberculosis (TB) from non-TB pulmonary infections in HIV-infected patients. Herein, we developed a scoring system aimed to rapidly determine the likelihood of TB or non-TB pathology in HIV-infected patients presenting with pulmonary infections.MethodsWe collected and collated data of hospitalized HIV-infected patients with pulmonary infections, followed by univariate and multivariate data analyses to determine risk variables that were significantly different between HIV/TB patients and HIV/non-TB patients. Subsequently, a regression coefficient was calculated for each variable, and a score was assigned to each variable in line with its regression coefficient. The sum of the scores for each variable in our scoring model was used to predict the likelihood of TB or non-TB pulmonary infection in each patient. Finally, we tested the diagnostic accuracy of the scoring system in our retrospective cohort, as well as in a prospective cohort.ResultsA total of 598 HIV-infected patients were enrolled in our retrospective cohort, among whom 288 had TB and 310 had non-TB pulmonary infections. Eight variables, including fever, highest body temperature, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), cervical lymphadenopathy, hilar and/or mediastinum lymphadenopathy, pulmonary cavitation, pleural effusion, and miliary nodules, were found to be mathematically significantly different via univariate analysis and multivariate logistic regression analysis. After regression coefficient calculation followed by score assignment, a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was plotted, and the area under the curve (AUC) was calculated to be 0.902. When the total score for a patient is > 12, the sensitivity and specificity for TB prediction using our scoring system were 76.4% and 87.7% respectively in the retrospective cohort, and its diagnostic accuracy was 82.7% in the prospective cohort.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that our proposed diagnostic scoring system could be helpful in differentiating pulmonary TB from non-TB pulmonary infections in HIV-infected patients.

Highlights

  • It remains challenging to differentiate tuberculosis (TB) from non-TB pulmonary infections in HIVinfected patients

  • Our results demonstrate that our proposed diagnostic scoring system could be helpful in differentiating pulmonary TB from non-TB pulmonary infections in Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients

  • The selection criteria for our retrospective cohort were as follows: (1) HIV-infected patients admitted to the Division of Infectious Diseases of Chongqing Public Health Medical Center; (2) Diagnosis of HIV/AIDS was consistent with Chinese Guidelines for Diagnosis and Treatment of HIV/AIDS [6]; (3) Aged 18–65 years; (4) Received chest computerized tomography (CT) imaging examination; (5) Co-existing pulmonary infections; (6) The requisite case records were complete and traceable

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Summary

Introduction

It remains challenging to differentiate tuberculosis (TB) from non-TB pulmonary infections in HIVinfected patients. We developed a scoring system aimed to rapidly determine the likelihood of TB or non-TB pathology in HIV-infected patients presenting with pulmonary infections. In 2019, about 10 million people developed TB globally, and among them, 8.2% of these individuals were people living with HIV. HIV-infected patients are susceptible to various opportunistic infections as a consequence of a paucity of adequate cellular immunity, among which TB remains the leading cause of hospitalization and death among people living with HIV [2]. MTB increases HIV viral load and genetic mutation, accelerates CD4 + T-cell depletion, and leads to progressive HIV disease [3, 4]. HIV results in a 2–20 times increased risk of TB above baseline rates, and causes more cases of multi-drug resistant TB [3, 4]

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