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Clinical Features and Outcomes of Tuberculosis in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients Treated with Anti-tumor Necrosis Factor Therapy

Title
Clinical Features and Outcomes of Tuberculosis in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients Treated with Anti-tumor Necrosis Factor Therapy
Authors
Kim J.Im J.P.Yim J.-J.Lee C.K.Park D.I.Eun C.S.Jung S.-A.Shin J.E.Lee K.-M.Cheon J.H.
Ewha Authors
정성애
SCOPUS Author ID
정성애scopus
Issue Date
2020
Journal Title
The Korean journal of gastroenterology = Taehan Sohwagi Hakhoe chi
ISSN
2233-6869JCR Link
Citation
The Korean journal of gastroenterology = Taehan Sohwagi Hakhoe chi vol. 75, no. 1, pp. 29 - 38
Keywords
Inflammatory bowel diseasesTuberculosisTumor necrosis factor inhibitors
Publisher
NLM (Medline)
Indexed
SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Background/Aims: Anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) therapy is used widely for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). In the present study, the characteristics and outcomes of tuberculosis (TB) in IBD patients treated with anti-TNF therapy were compared with those of non-IBD TB patients. Methods: Twenty-five IBD patients who initially developed TB during anti-TNF therapy were enrolled in this study. Seventy-five ageand gender-matched non-IBD TB patients were selected as controls in a 1:3 ratio. Results: The proportion of non-respiratory symptoms was higher in the IBD patients than in the non-IBD patients (12 [48.0%] in the IBD patients vs. 15 [20.0%] in the non-IBD patients; p=0.009). Eight (32.0%) IBD patients and 19 (25.3%) non-IBD patients had extra- pulmonary lesions (p=0.516). The frequency of positive smear results for acid-fast bacilli (AFB) was significantly higher in the non-IBD patients than in the IBD patients (three [12.0%] IBD patients vs. 27 [36.0%] non-IBD patients; p=0.023). Active TB was cured in 24 (96.0%) patients in the IBD group and in 70 (93.3%) patients in the non-IBD group (p=0.409). The TB-related mortality rates were 4.0% and 1.3% in the IBD patients and non-IBD patients, respectively (p=0.439). Conclusions: The rate of extrapulmonary involvement, side effects of anti-TB medications, and clinical outcomes did not differ between the IBD patients who initially developed TB during anti-TNF therapy and non-IBD patients with TB. On the other hand, the IBD patients had a lower rate of AFB smear positivity and a higher proportion of non-respiratory symptoms.
DOI
10.4166/kjg.2020.75.1.29
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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