The prevalence of urogenital tuberculosis in people living with HIV.

The prevalence of urogenital tuberculosis in people living with HIV.

Publication date: Jan 01, 2025

The prevalence of urogenital tuberculosis (UGT) is not well known, especially in people living with HIV, therefore, our aim was to identify the prevalence of urogenital tuberculosis in HIV-infected individuals and characterize the clinical and laboratory risk factors associated with UGT. A cross sectional study was conducted to characterize the prevalence of UGT in people living with HIV. PCR tests and specific culture were performed on samples from 181 patients living with HIV, divided into two groups: A) patients with suggestive UGT symptoms and b) hospitalized patients without any suggestive UGT symptoms. Only one case of UGT was diagnosed, with a positive PCR but negative specific culture, resulting in a prevalence of 0. 55%. The patient had disseminated tuberculosis (miliary pulmonary, intestinal, and urogenital with bilateral nephromegaly) with acute febrile syndrome, no urogenital symptoms, but with microscopic hematuria and sterile pyuria. This patient had poorly controlled HIV infection with positive viral load and CD4 count below 200 cells/mm^3. The prevalence of UGT in patients living with HIV is very low. However, patients with poorly controlled disease may present disseminated tuberculosis associated with UGT. Urine screening for UGT may be relevant for diagnosing disseminated tuberculosis in patients living with HIV with acute infectious syndrome.

Concepts Keywords
200cells Adult
Cd4 AIDS
Hiv AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections
Pcr Cross-Sectional Studies
Urogenital Extrapulmonary tuberculosis
Female
HIV
HIV Infections
Humans
Immunodeficiency
Male
Middle Aged
Prevalence
Risk Factors
Tuberculosis, Urogenital
Urogenital tuberculosis

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH urogenital tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease MESH tuberculosis
disease MESH syndrome
disease MESH pyuria
disease MESH HIV infection
pathway REACTOME HIV Infection
disease MESH viral load
disease MESH AIDS
disease MESH AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections
disease MESH Extrapulmonary tuberculosis
disease IDO immunodeficiency

Original Article

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