Elevated Serum TNF-α/IL-1β Levels and Under-Nutrition Predict Early Mortality and Hospital Stay Burden in Pulmonary Tuberculosis.
Ionut-Valentin Stanciu, Ariadna-Petronela Fildan, Adrian Cosmin Ilie, Cristian Oancea, Livia Stanga, Emanuela Tudorache, Felix Bratosin, Ovidiu Rosca, et al. (13 authors)
Journal of clinical medicine · 2025-07
Abstract
Romania remains a tuberculosis (TB) hotspot in the European Union, yet host-derived factors of poor outcomes are poorly characterised. We quantified circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines and examined their interplay with behavioural risk factors, the nutritional status, and the clinical course in adults hospitalised with pulmonary TB. We analysed 80 adults with microbiologically confirmed pulmonary TB and 40 respiratory symptom controls; four TB patients (5%) died during hospitalisation, all within 10 days of admission.A retrospective analytical case-control study was conducted at the Constanța regional TB referral centre (October 2020-October 2023). Patients with smear- or culture-confirmed TB were frequency-matched by sex, 10-year age band, and BMI class to culture-negative respiratory controls at a 2:1 ratio. The patients' serum interferon-γ (IFN-γ), interleukin-1α (IL-1α), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), and tumour-necrosis-factor-α (TNF-α) were quantified within 24 h of admission; the neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio (NLR) was extracted from full blood counts. Independent predictors of in-hospital mortality were identified by multivariable logistic regression; factors associated with the length of stay (LOS) were modelled with quasi-Poisson regression.The median TNF-α (24.1 pg mLvs. 16.2 pg mL;= 0.009) and IL-1β (5.34 pg mLvs. 3.67 pg mL;= 0.008) were significantly higher in the TB cases than in controls. TNF-α was strongly correlated with IL-1β (ρ = 0.80;< 0.001), while NLR showed weak concordance with multiplex cytokine patterns. Among the patients with TB, four early deaths (5%) exhibited a tripling of TNF-α (71.4 pg mL) and a doubling of NLR (7.8) compared with the survivors. Each 10 pg mLrise in TNF-α independently increased the odds of in-hospital death by 1.8-fold (95% CI 1.1-3.0;= 0.02). The LOS (median 29 days) was unrelated to the smoking, alcohol, or comorbidity load, but varied across BMI strata: underweight, 27 days; normal weight, 30 days; overweight, 23 days (Kruskal-Wallis= 0.03). In a multivariable analysis, under-nutrition (BMI < 18.5 kg m) prolonged the LOS by 19% (IRR 1.19; 95% CI 1.05-1.34;= 0.004) independently of the disease severity.A hyper-TNF-α/IL-1β systemic signature correlates with early mortality in Romanian pulmonary TB, while under-nutrition is the dominant modifiable determinant of prolonged hospitalisation. Admission algorithms that pair rapid TNF-α testing with systematic nutritional assessment could enable targeted host-directed therapy trials and optimise bed utilisation in high-burden settings.