Chest x-ray findings in tuberculosis patients identified by passive and active case finding: A retrospective study
Ema Rastoder, Saher Burhan Shaker, Matiullah Naqibullah, Mathilde Marie Winkler Wille, Mette Aagaard Lund, Jon Torgny Wilcke, Niels Seersholm, Sidse Graff Jensen
Journal of Clinical Tuberculosis and Other Mycobacterial Diseases · 2019-01
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chest x-ray is central in screening and diagnosis of tuberculosis. However, sputum culture remains gold standard for diagnosis. AIM: To establish the rate of normal chest x-rays in tuberculosis patients found by spot sputum culture screening, and compare them to a group identified through passive case finding. METHOD: Chest x-rays from 39 culture-positive patients, identified by spot sputum culture screening in Copenhagen from 2012 to 2014, were included in the study (spot sputum culture group(SSC)). 39 normal chest x-rays from persons screened by mobile x-ray, and 39 chest x-rays from tuberculosis-patients identified through passive case finding(PCF) were anonymised and randomised. Two respiratory physicians and two radiologists assessed the chest x-rays. RESULTS: The normal chest x-ray rate was higher in the non-tuberculosis control group (median = 32 (82.1%), range = 74.4% - 100%), compared to the SSC group (median = 7 (17.9%), range = 10.3% - 33.3%), and the PCF controls (median = 3(7.7%), range = 2.6% - 15.4%). In the SSC group 14 (35.9%) were categorized as normal by at least one study participant. CONCLUSION: A substantial minority of patients diagnosed with tuberculosis by spot sputum culture screening, and through passive case finding would not have been identified with chest x-ray alone, highlighting that a normal chest x-ray does not exclude pulmonary tuberculosis.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Active tuberculosis
- Retrospective cohort study
- Surgery
- Radiology