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Título

Prevalence and Clinical Characteristics of Children With Nonsevere Tuberculosis in Spain

AutorHernanz-Lobo, Alicia; Noguera-Julián, Antoni; Minguell, Laura; López-Suárez, Andrea; Soriano-Arandes, Antoni; Espiau, María; Colino, Elena; López Medina, Eva María; Bustillo Alonso, Matilde; Aguirre-Pascual, Elisa; Baquero-Artigao, Fernando; Calavia, Olga; Gómez-Pastrana, David; Falcón Neyra, Lola CSIC ORCID; Santiago-García, Begoña
Palabras claveNonsevere tuberculosis
Pediatric tuberculosis
Chest radiograph
Adenopathy
Short treatment
Fecha de publicaciónoct-2023
EditorWolters Kluwer
CitaciónThe Pediatric infectious disease journal 42(10): 837-843 (2023)
ResumenBackground: To assess the prevalence and characteristics of nonsevere TB among children in Spain. It has been recently demonstrated that these children can be treated with a 4-month regimen instead of the classical 6-month treatment regimen, with the same effectivity and outcomes, decreasing toxicity and improving adherence. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study in a cohort of children ≤16 years of age with TB. Nonsevere TB cases included smear-negative children with respiratory TB confined to 1 lobe, with no significant airway obstruction, no complex pleural effusion, no cavities and no signs of miliary disease, or with peripheral lymph-node disease. The remaining children were considered to have severe TB. We estimated the prevalence of nonsevere TB and compared the clinical characteristics and outcomes between children with nonsevere and severe TB. Results: A total of 780 patients were included [46.9% males, median age 5.5 years (IQR: 2.6–11.1)], 477 (61.1%) of whom had nonsevere TB. Nonsevere TB was less frequent in children <1 year (33% vs 67%; P < 0.001), and >14 years of age (35% vs 65%; P = 0.002), mostly diagnosed in contact tracing studies (60.4% vs 29.2%; P < 0.001) and more frequently asymptomatic (38.3% vs 17.7%; P < 0.001). TB confirmation in nonsevere disease was less frequent by culture (27.0% vs 57.1%; P < 0.001) and by molecular tests (18.2% vs 48.8%; P < 0.001). Sequelae were less frequent in children with nonsevere disease (1.7 vs 5.4%; P < 0.001). No child with nonsevere disease died. Conclusions: Two-thirds of children had nonsevere TB, mostly with benign clinical presentation and negative microbiologic results. In low-burden countries, most children with TB might benefit from short-course regimens.
Versión del editorhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1097/INF.0000000000004016
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/352379
DOI10.1097/INF.0000000000004016
ISSN0891-3668
E-ISSN1532-0987
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