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Page 1: Diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis. 2 PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS

Diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis

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PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS

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Inhalation of myc. tuberculosis proliferation in alveoli

Spread via the lymphatic system

The infection is

contained. Hypersensitivity to tuberculoprotein positive skin test

possible reactivation in the futur:=Post primary TB

Proliferation of the infectionhilar nodes enlargment

bronchus, alveolar, pleural involvment

=Primary TB

Hematogenous dissemination: pulmonary miliaryand extra-pulmonary TB

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The diagnosis of pulmonary TB: The usual ways in the context of a developing country:

* Microsopic examination of sputums for research of acid fast bacillus. (AFB)

Reminder: Acid-fastness is a physical property of some bacteria referring to their resistance to decolorization by acids during staining procedures

Less frequent:

* Chest radiography* Skin test with tuberculine* Biopsy specimen and anatomo-pathology (pleural

biopsy, endoscopic biopsy…)

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The diagnosis of pulmonary TB (2)

More sophisticated ways in developed countries

culture + Antibiogram: useful for multi-resistant TB

Molecular genetic methods: Polymerase chain reaction usefull for diagnosis of TB and resistance to rifampicin and isoniazid

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Main bacteriological techniques (1)Microsopic examination of sputum for research of acid fast bacillus by Ziehl coloration or auramine this examination detects

contagious patients, who have a pulmonary tuberculosis (TPM+).

It is a screening for patients who cough and spit and who have a sufficient quantity of bacilli in sputum to be detected: > 5000/ ml

These patients are the most contaminating patients

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But TPM- are numerous

• « pauci-bacillar » cases : < 5000 bacilli per ml in sputum:-Nodular tuberculosis (non-excavated)

-miliary - tubercular adenopathy - extra-pulmonary cases (EPT)

• Too weak patients who cannot produce sufficient sputum for bacterial analysis or are not cooperating (salivary sputum…)

• Treatment has begun before screening • Technical error in the research of AFB.

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But radiological aspects of TB are numerous and not always specific

In cases of TPM- the physician must decid of TB treatment on clinical and radiological datas

Differential diagnosis are numerous, especially in case of Coinfection with HIV

Nodules : TPM-Infiltrates: TPM-/+Cavities: TPM+Pneumoniae: generally TPM+Miliary: TPM-Pleural effusion: TPM-Adenopathies: TPM-Séquella (inactive or not :TPM- / M+)

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© OFCP © OFCP

Infiltrat Cavities Milliary

TB pneumonia TB adenopathies VIH- Péricarditis TBAFB+ +

AFB +AFB+/-

AFB - AFB -

AFB -

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The efficiency of the microscopic examination increases with the

repetition of the samples ( Al Zahrani and coll. Int j. tuber. Lung dis. Sept 2005)

Sample number

Positive sample withZiehl %

positive culture

1 66 93

2 76 97

3 84 99

4 85 100

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Main bacteriological techniques (2)

❏ culture• The culture by the classical

method (Lowenstein culture medium):– A bit difficult, rather high cost, delayed

results (1 to 2 months after the initial sample),

– Especially useful for tuberculosis with few bacilli which cannot be diagnosed by direct microscopic examination: TPM- and EPT

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Main bacteriological techniques(3)

❏ Other forms of culture

• The gelose culture medium (Middlebrook medium) 3 to 4 weeks (instead of 4 to 6 with the traditional

method).

• The liquid culture medium: – radioactive medium (Bactec system) – non-radioactive medium (MGIT) Can detect bacilli in 8 to 14 days.

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❏ Molecular genetic methods: PCR ( Polymerase Chain Reaction)• genomic amplification technique:

specific DNA probes can identify different mycobacteria.

• Advantage: Results in 24 to 48 h, very good specificity (97% to 98%).

• Result in les than 2 hours with system X pert MTB/RIF Test

• Disadvantage: low sensitivity in comparison to the culture (+/-80%), high cost, but progress with more recent systems (Accuprobe ®, Genprobe®)

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4 Sample automaticallyfiltered and washed

5 Ultrasonic lysisof filter-capturedorganisms torelease DNA7

6 DNA moleculesmixed with dryPCR reagents7

7 Seminested real-timeAmplificationand detectionin integrated reaction tube

1 Sputum liquefactionand inactivation with2:1 sample reagent

2 Transfer of2 ml materialinto test cartridge

3 Cartridge inserted intoMTB-RIF test platform(end of hands-on work)

8 Printabletest result

Résults in less than 2 hours

X pert MTB/RIF Test

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❏ Sensitivity tests: antibiograms

• Indirect antibiogram: after obtaining colonies with culture (results 2 to 3 months after initial sample).

• Direct antibiogram, only possible if the initial sample contains very many bacili.

(results in 4 - 6 weeks)

. Difficult technique, high cost, delayed results.

• Routinely, this test is not necessary for treatment of the majority of patients.

• It is very useful if there is any suspicion of resistance

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Some questions

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Q1. What is the role of the chest x-ray in the national TB program

(1)? Rich and developped countries: respiratory symptoms

chest radiography(x-ray)

Developing countries: The chest x-ray is not recommended in first intention

(recommandations of OMS and UICTMR)

If TPM+: TB treatment without chest x-ray

If TPM- x 3 and persistance of symptoms after non-specific antibiotic, the national program recommands chest x-ray

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• The radiography cannot make, as microscopy, a definite diagnosis of TB, because radiological aspects of TB are varied and often non-specific.

• But some images are very indicative of TB. Some others images must invoke differential diagnosis.

• The chest radiography is essential for TPM(-) TB . It is necessary for the physicians to be able to make a correct analysis

>>> TPM- diagnosis is often made in excess, with a useless treatment and failure to spot or diagnose another pathology .

Q1. What is the role of the chest x-ray in the national TB program

(2)

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Disagreement between clinician and radiologist about the analysis of the chest radiography

Evaluation Percentage of disagreement

Detection of a cavity 28%Pulmonary abnormality 34%Adenopathy 60%Pulmonary calcification 42%Deterioration between 2 chest x-rays

30%

Deciding whether an abnormality is TB or not TB

45%

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3 distinct situations:

• The chest x-ray strongly suggests TB.• The chest x-ray does not remotely suggest

TB• The chest x-ray could suggest TB, but

differential diagnoses are certainly possible.

Whatever the situation, it is always important to confront patient history, clinical signs, bacteriology and radiology

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Q2. What is the role of the tuberculin skin test ?

A tuberculin skin test is sometimes useful for the diagnosis of TB (contact with contagious patient)

The interpretation of a test result is often very difficult:

- False positive : BCG vaccination, technical error in injection or in the induration measurement, other mycobacterial infection-False negative : technical error in injection or in the induration measurement, viral infection, immunodepression, anergic time (+/- 40 days)…

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• Q3. Who should be considered a “case” of

TB?

• 1 smear (+) examination for TB should be recorded as smear positive (TPM+).

• All other cases should be recorded as smear negative (TPM-) or as extra-pulmonary cases (EPTB).

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B. Extra-pulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB)

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INTRODUCTION

The diagnosis of EPTB is difficult and sometimes requires sophisticated means:

• Surgical biopsies and anapath. examination

• Bacterial samples obtained by puncture with culture if possible

BUT…in developing countries, these techniques are not always available

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INTRODUCTION(2)

Aids epidemy: gradual increase of percentage of EPTB

If a bacteriological or anapath sample doesn’t exist, the diagnosis is made with the association of clinical, biological, radiological arguments and sometimes with the analysis of the evolution under TB treatment

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Main forms of EPTBSerous

membrane TB

Pericarditis

pleuritis

Peritonitis

Adenopathies

Miliary

Genital and urinary

Bones

Neuro meningeal

Hepatic and intestinal

multivisceral

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Diagnosis procedure (1)

Type of EPTB

Presumption criteria Differential diagnosis

Certitude criteria

Pleural TB.

Clinical and radiological signs.

Pleural effusion:- serofibrinous-Protein > 30g or ratioor fluid.prot / serum prot.> 0.5-lymphocytes 80 to 100%

- Neoplasic effusion-Non-TB infectious disease

-Others…

Positive culture of

liquid.Positive

culture and anapath. of

biopsy specimen.

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Diagnosis procedure (2)

Type of

EPTB

Presumption criteria Differential diagnosis

Certitude criteria

Node TB

Clinical signs indicative localisation(cervical, mediastinal...)

Cancer, lymphoma,Non-TB infectious disease…

Puncture and biopsy:AFB+ at

microscopic examination.

Positive culture and

anapath

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Diagnosis procedure (3)Type of EPTB

Presumption criteria Differential diagnosis

Certitude criteria

TB meningitis

Clinical contextCerero-spinal fluid:-clear fluid-CSF cell count: lymphocytosis 30 to 500/mm3-CSF protein: >100mg /dl-CSF glucose:< 0.5 glycemy

-Fungal(cryptococcus)

- Bacterial (beginning of infection or pre-treated) -Neoplasic -viral meningo-encephalitis(herpes simplex)

AFB+ in CSF (infrequent)

India ink –

Culture +(but late result)

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Diagnosis procedure (4)Type of EPTB

Presumption criteria Differential diagnosis

Certitude criteria

TB peritonitis

Abdominal pain, fever, weight loss, sub-occlusive syndromeAscitis without portal hypertension or cirrhosisUltrasound: mesenteric adenopathiesFluid: -lemon yellow color -leucocyte count: 150 to 4000/mm3 (lymphocitic) -protein>30 g/l-serum/ascite gradiant albumine <1.1

-peritoneal carcinomatosis-Pancreatic ascite-non-TB poly microbial infection(beginning)

Laparoscopy and biopsy

specimen for anapath

Examination and culture:

(Multiple whitish nodules on visceral and

parietal peritoneum)

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Diagnosis procedure (5)Type of EPTB

Presumption criteria Differential diagnosis

Certitude criteria

Spinal TB(=TB of the vertebra)

-Local pain +++indolent on the beginning>>delay in diagnosis>>>neurologicSequela-Sometimes local abcess (cold abcess)-++Radiological findings (but not specific): osteolytic lesion with or without disc involvment, on 1 or many levels(chest x-ray normal in > 50% of cases)

Staphyloccocus brucellosis,HistoplasmosisInfection.Bone metastasis.

Biopsy: culture and anapath exam. of the infected bone:But rarely possible in DC, except if soft tissue abcess

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Diagnosis procedure (5)Type of EPTB

Presumption criteria Differential diagnosis

Certitude criteria

Genito-urinary

Tuberculosis

Dysury, steril pyuri, hematuryCombination of upper and lower tract involvment

female: pelvic chronic pain, sterility, salpingitis ectopic pregnancy

Male: epydidymitis and orchi-epidydimitis

Non-TB genital and urinary infection

AFB+ or culture+ in urine, mensesEndometrial biopsyLaparoscopic biopsy

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examples of EPTB…

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Multi-visceral TB in case of miliary

© OFCP

© OFCP

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Affected Vertebrae in Spinal Tuberculosis

Cervical

Thoracic

Lumbar

Sacral

Chen WJ, et al. Acta Orthop Scand 1995;66:137-42

Affected Vertebrae in Spinal Tuberculosis

Cervical

Thoracic

Lumbar

Sacral

Chen WJ, et al. Acta Orthop Scand 1995;66:137-42

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© OFCP

Pott’s disease

© OFCP

Lyse costaleLyse costale© OFCP

Abcès TB du psoas GAbcès TB du psoas G© OFCP Psoas abcess

Rib lysis

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Pott’s disease

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TB arthritis with important destruction of the joint

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UIV

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Adénites TBcervicales et axillaires Gchez un patient cambodgien SIDA

© OFCP

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Pulmonary and skin tuberculosis(1)

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After treatment

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After treatment

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* Courtesy of Dr Fabrice Simon

Courtesy of Dr Guy Aurégan

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