Disseminated Tuberculosis Masquerading as Malignancy in an Immunocompetent Middle-aged Woman: A Multiorgan Imaging Case Report and Updated Review for Clinicians.
Jacobo-Enrique Adam-Sosa, Andrea-Fernanda Gonzalez-Soto, Luis Camarillo-Solache, Ricardo Cebrian-Garcia, Mauricio Molina-Gonzalez, Maria-Del-Carmen Garcia-Blanco, Ernesto Roldan-Valadez
Current medical imaging · 2026-01
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Disseminated tuberculosis (dTB) can occur in immunocompetent adults, frequently mimicking metastatic malignancy, thereby delaying the diagnosis.
CASE PRESENTATION: A young woman without known immunosuppression developed multisystem disease involving the peritoneum/ovaries, hepatobiliary structures, lymph nodes, adrenals, and thoracolumbar spine. CT/MRI and PET/CT suggested widespread neoplastic disease. Because FDG avidity is nonspecific, we prioritized histologic confirmation. Surgical exploration and targeted biopsies showed necrotizing granulomatous inflammation compatible with tuberculosis; microbiologic testing supported the diagnosis. The patient commenced directly observed first-line therapy (isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, ethambutol) as the intensive phase, followed by an isoniazid-rifampin continuation phase. Under treatment, symptoms improved, and interval imaging showed regression of inflammatory lesions.
CONCLUSION: In cancer-like, multisystem presentations, even in apparently immunocompetent hosts, tissue diagnosis is decisive, and imaging should primarily guide sampling. Early recognition and standardized therapy can prevent irreversible morbidity.