Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease (Oct 2022)

Disseminated tuberculosis in a lung transplant recipient presenting as tenosynovitis, subcutaneous nodules, and liver abscesses

  • Lilian Vargas Barahona,
  • José Henao-Cordero,
  • Joshua Smith,
  • Alice Gray,
  • Carrie B. Marshall,
  • Sias Scherger,
  • Valida Bajrovic,
  • Yiannis Koullias

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20499361221132153
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Tuberculosis is of particular concern in lung transplant recipients. We present the case of a patient who received a double lung transplant from a deceased donor from Mexico and developed disseminated tuberculosis 60 days post-transplant manifested as tenosynovitis, liver abscesses, and subcutaneous nodules with no definitive lung allograft involvement. The recipient did not have evidence of tuberculosis on explanted lungs, had a negative interferon gamma release assay pre-transplant, and did not have risk factors for this infection. Mycobacterium tuberculosis should remain in the differential diagnosis of early post-transplant infections with atypical presentations, evidence of dissemination, or lack of improvement with appropriate antimicrobial coverage, even in the absence of typical lung findings.