Scientific Reports (Oct 2022)

A comparison of the chest radiographic and computed tomographic features of subclinical pulmonary tuberculosis

  • Angela Lau,
  • Christopher Lin,
  • James Barrie,
  • Christopher Winter,
  • Gavin Armstrong,
  • Mary Lou Egedahl,
  • Alexander Doroshenko,
  • Courtney Heffernan,
  • Leyla Asadi,
  • Dina Fisher,
  • Catherine Paulsen,
  • Jalal Moolji,
  • Yiming Huang,
  • Richard Long

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-21016-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Subclinical pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) is a recently described intermediate state of great interest, but about which little is known. This study sought to describe and compare the frequency of key radiologic features of subclinical PTB on chest radiograph (CXR) versus computed tomographic scan (CT), and to interpret the clinical and public health relevance of the differences. Diagnostic CXRs and CT scans of the thorax and neck in a 16-year cohort of subclinical PTB patients in Canada were re-acquired and read by two independent readers and arbitrated by a third reader. Logistic regression models were fit to determine how likely CXR features can be detected by CT scan versus CXR after adjustment for age and sex. Among 296 subclinical patients, CXRs were available in 286 (96.6%) and CT scans in 94 (32.9%). CXR features in patients with and without CT scans were comparable. Lung cavitation was 4.77 times (95% CI 1.95–11.66), endobronchial spread 19.36 times (95% CI 8.05–46.52), and moderate/far-advanced parenchymal disease 3.23 times (95% CI 1.66–6.30), more common on CT scan than CXR. We conclude that the extent to which CXRs under-detect key radiologic features in subclinical PTB is substantial. This may have public health and treatment implications.