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Pulmonary
tuberculosis: Virulence of Mycobacterium africanum and relevance in
HIV co-infection.Tuberculosis
(Edinb). 2008 Jun 28.
Although
Mycobacterium africanum is being isolated in a significant
proportion of cases of pulmonary tuberculosis in West Africa, its
pathogenic potential remains a matter of discussion. Recent reports
leave the question of whether M. africanum causes more severe
pathology than M. tuberculosis or resembles opportunistic pathogens
and might gain importance in the course of the HIV pandemic.
Patients with pulmonary tuberculosis associated with M. africanum
(n=556) and M. tuberculosis (n=1350) were studied in Ghana, West
Africa, and compared regarding self-reported signs and symptoms,
chest radiography, HIV status, mycobacterial drug resistance and
mycobacterial clustering as determined by spoligotyping and IS6110
fingerprints. The rate of M. africanum infections was similar in
HIV-positive (27%) and HIV-negative (30%) patients. M. africanum
clustered less than M. tuberculosis (21% vs 79%; OR, 0.38; 95% CI,
0.3-0.5; p<0.001) corresponding to its lower prevalence (29% vs
70%). Clinically and radiographically, no significant differences
were found except that M. africanum caused lower-lobe disease less
frequently than M. tuberculosis (OR, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.2-0.7; p(c)=0.01),
whereby this association applied to HIV-negative patients only. No
difference in virulence, as assessed by the severity of radiological
presentation, was found when the two M. africanum subtypes West
African 1 and West African 2 were compared. In the population
studied, M. africanum closely resembled M. tuberculosis in pathology
and cannot be considered an opportunistic pathogen. |