Forty years of Tuberculous meningitis: The new face of an old enemy
García-Caballero A, Navarro-San Francisco C, Martínez-García L, López-Martinez MJ, Corral-Corral I, Gómez-Mampaso E, Cantón R, Tato-Diez M
International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases · 2020-07
Abstract
Background Tuberculous meningitis (TBM) occurs in 1-5% of cases of tuberculosis. Without early treatment, mortality and permanent disability rates are high. Methods A retrospective study performed at a tertiary hospital in Madrid (Spain) to describe clinical, diagnostic, and therapeutic aspects of TBM and analyze epidemiological trends over forty years, divided into two intervals (1979-1998 and 1999-2018). Results Overall, TBM was diagnosed in 65 patients (1.8% of new tuberculosis diagnoses), 48 in the first period and 17 in the second one. Median age at diagnosis increased from 38.5 to 77 years (p = 0.003). The proportion of non-HIV immunosuppressed patients increased (from 2.1% to 29.4%, p Conclusions The profile of patients diagnosed with TBM has changed from a young HIV-infected patient with a history of drug addiction to an elderly patient with non-HIV immunosuppression. Diagnosis and start of treatment both experienced a noticeable delay in the second period, which could help explain the increase in mortality observed across the two periods.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Tuberculosis, Meningeal
- HIV Infections
- Spinal Puncture
- Retrospective Studies
- Adult
- Aged
- Middle Aged
- Spain
- Female
- Male
- Time-to-Treatment