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1657. Musculoskeletal Tuberculosis in a Large Healthcare System
Author(s) -
Travis Denmeade,
William R. Smith,
Banks Kooken,
Michael Leonard
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
open forum infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.546
H-Index - 35
ISSN - 2328-8957
DOI - 10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.1835
Subject(s) - medicine , retrospective cohort study , incidence (geometry) , tuberculosis , concomitant , disease , pediatrics , surgery , pathology , physics , optics
Background Musculoskeletal tuberculosis (TB) is an important and elusive manifestation of extrapulmonary TB. This purpose of this study was to examine incidence and associated co-morbidities of confirmed cases of musculoskeletal TB at Atrium Health, a large non-profit health system in the Southeastern United States. Methods Retrospective case series of 12 adult patients with confirmed musculoskeletal TB between 2008-2019. Individuals younger than 18 years were excluded. The primary objective was to compare local incidence of musculoskeletal TB with that reported in the literature. Secondary objectives included analysis of patient co-morbidities for their correlation with the development of musculoskeletal manifestations of TB and requirement of surgical correction for underlying deformities from TB infection. Results 237 patients were identified with confirmed TB infection from 2008-2019 in a retrospective cohort within the Atrium Health System. Of 237 patients, 94 (40%) had extrapulmonary disease and 12 (5%) had musculoskeletal manifestations defined as involvement of bone, joint space, or muscle and were included in this analysis. Six (50%) of the 12 patients were foreign born individuals who immigrated to the US. Three (33%) had concomitant pulmonary disease. Vertebral involvement (8, 66%) was most common and 1 (8%) patient noted to have infected total knee arthroplasty. Other sites included wrist, sternum, ribs and pelvis. Co-morbidities evaluated included HIV status 0%, diabetes (2, 17%), immunosuppressive medications (1, 8%), ESRD 0%, and rheumatologic disease 0%. Surgical intervention was necessary in 4 (33%) patients for both diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. Conclusion Of those tested for HIV 100% were negative but only 50% were tested showing a need for improved HIV testing. Very few had other co-morbid conditions including diabetes, use of immunosuppressive medications, ESRD status, or rheumatologic disease. Surgical intervention was needed in 33% of patients with musculoskeletal TB including several with a preoperative suspected diagnosis of malignancy. In this retrospective case series, the incidence of musculoskeletal TB was 5% in comparison to the 2-3% reported consistently in the US. Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures

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