Kimberly R Schildknecht, Molly Deutsch-Feldman, Jason Cummins, Divia P Forbes, Maryam B Haddad, Ibironke W Apata, Jonathan M Wortham
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: People with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have a higher risk for progression to tuberculosis disease following infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We produced a nationwide incidence estimate and description of tuberculosis among people with kidney failure.
Methods: We completed a cross-sectional descriptive analysis of people with a reported case of tuberculosis in the United States between 2010 and 2021. We stratified all people with tuberculosis by reported kidney failure status. The primary outcome was tuberculosis incidence among people with kidney failure. We also compared characteristics of people with tuberculosis by reported kidney failure status.
Results: Approximately 3% of people (2,892 of 111,155) diagnosed with tuberculosis between 2010 and 2021 also had kidney failure. Annual tuberculosis incidence ranged from 26.1 to 45.4 per 100,000 people with kidney failure and 2.1 to 3.5 per 100,000 people without kidney failure. Among people with kidney failure, 924 (32%) had extrapulmonary tuberculosis only, and nearly 40% died: 286 were diagnosed with tuberculosis after death, and 792 died during treatment. People with tuberculosis and kidney failure had approximately twice the prevalence of a false-negative tuberculin skin test result (39%) compared to people with tuberculosis alone (20%).
Conclusions: Tuberculosis incidence among people with kidney failure between 2010 and 2021 in the United States was 10-fold that among people without kidney failure.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN) stands as the preeminent kidney journal globally, offering an exceptional synthesis of cutting-edge basic research, clinical epidemiology, meta-analysis, and relevant editorial content. Representing a comprehensive resource, JASN encompasses clinical research, editorials distilling key findings, perspectives, and timely reviews.
Editorials are skillfully crafted to elucidate the essential insights of the parent article, while JASN actively encourages the submission of Letters to the Editor discussing recently published articles. The reviews featured in JASN are consistently erudite and comprehensive, providing thorough coverage of respective fields. Since its inception in July 1990, JASN has been a monthly publication.
JASN publishes original research reports and editorial content across a spectrum of basic and clinical science relevant to the broad discipline of nephrology. Topics covered include renal cell biology, developmental biology of the kidney, genetics of kidney disease, cell and transport physiology, hemodynamics and vascular regulation, mechanisms of blood pressure regulation, renal immunology, kidney pathology, pathophysiology of kidney diseases, nephrolithiasis, clinical nephrology (including dialysis and transplantation), and hypertension. Furthermore, articles addressing healthcare policy and care delivery issues relevant to nephrology are warmly welcomed.