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Host Determinants of Infectiousness in Smear-Positive Patients With Pulmonary Tuberculosis
Author(s) -
Carlos Acuña-Villaorduña,
Irene Ayakaka,
Luiz Guilherme Schmidt-Castellani,
Francis Mumbowa,
Patrícia Marques-Rodrigues,
Mary Gaeddert,
Laura F. White,
Moisés Palaci,
Jerrold J. Ellner,
Reynaldo Dietze,
Moses Joloba,
Kevin P. Fennelly,
Edward C. JonesLópez
Publication year - 2019
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/ofz184
Subject(s) - medicine , sputum , tuberculosis , aerosol , mycobacterium tuberculosis , sputum culture , logistic regression , pulmonary tuberculosis , immunology , gastroenterology , pathology , physics , meteorology
Background Epidemiologic data suggests that only a minority of tuberculosis (TB) patients are infectious. Cough aerosol sampling is a novel quantitative method to measure TB infectiousness. Methods We analyzed data from three studies conducted in Uganda and Brazil over a 13-year period. We included sputum acid fast bacilli (AFB) and culture positive pulmonary TB patients and used a cough aerosol sampling system (CASS) to measure the number of colony-forming units (CFU) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in cough-generated aerosols as a measure for infectiousness. Aerosol data was categorized as: aerosol negative (CFU = 0) and aerosol positive (CFU > 0). Logistic regression models were built to identify factors associated with aerosol positivity. Results M. tuberculosis was isolated by culture from cough aerosols in 100/233 (43%) TB patients. In an unadjusted analysis, aerosol positivity was associated with fewer days of antituberculous therapy before CASS sampling (p = .0001), higher sputum AFB smear grade (p = .01), shorter days to positivity in liquid culture media (p = .02), and larger sputum volume (p = .03). In an adjusted analysis, only fewer days of TB treatment (OR 1.47 per 1 day of therapy, 95% CI 1.16-1.89; p = .001) was associated with aerosol positivity. Conclusion Cough generated aerosols containing viable M. tuberculosis, the infectious moiety in TB, are detected in a minority of TB patients and rapidly become non-culturable after initiation of antituberculous treatment. Mechanistic studies are needed to further elucidate these findings.

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