TB Research

Comparison of chest radiograph findings in ambulatory and hospitalized children with pulmonary tuberculosis

Elsingergy MM, Naidoo J, Baker G, Zar HJ, Lucas S, Andronikou S

Pediatric radiology · 2023-07

Abstract

Background The diagnosis of childhood tuberculosis (TB) is, in many instances, solely reliant on chest radiographs (CXRs), as they are often the only diagnostic tool available, especially in TB-endemic areas. Accuracy and reliability of CXRs for detecting TB lymphadenopathy may vary between groups depending on severity of presentation and presence of parenchymal disease, which may obscure visualization. Objective To compare CXR findings in ambulatory versus hospitalized children with laboratory confirmed pulmonary TB versus other lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) and test inter-rater agreement for these findings. Materials and methods Retrospective review, by two pediatric radiologists, of CXRs performed on children Results The number of enrolled patients was 181 (54% males); 69 (38%) were ambulatory and 112 (62%) were hospitalized. Of those enrolled, 87 (48%) were confirmed to have pulmonary TB, while 94 (52%) were other LRTI controls. Lymphadenopathy and airway compression were more common in TB patients than other LRTI controls, regardless of patient location. Parenchymal changes and pleural effusion were more common in hospitalized than ambulatory patients, regardless of patient diagnosis. Agreement for parenchymal changes was higher in the hospitalized group (kappa [κ] = 0.75), while agreement for lymphadenopathy (κ = 0.65) and airway compression (κ = 0.68) was higher in the ambulatory group. The specificity of CXRs for TB diagnosis (> 75%) was higher than the sensitivity ( Conclusion Higher frequency of parenchymal changes among hospitalized children may conceal specific imaging findings of TB such as lymphadenopathy, contributing to the poor reliability of CXRs. Despite this, the high specificity of CXRs shown in our results is encouraging for continued use of radiographs for TB diagnosis in both settings.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Tuberculosis, Pulmonary
  • Respiratory Tract Infections
  • Radiography, Thoracic
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Child
  • Child, Hospitalized
  • Female
  • Male
  • Lymphadenopathy