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. 2012 Jul;41(4):488-95.
doi: 10.1093/ageing/afs028. Epub 2012 Mar 19.

Tuberculosis in ageing: high rates, complex diagnosis and poor clinical outcomes

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Tuberculosis in ageing: high rates, complex diagnosis and poor clinical outcomes

Luis Pablo Cruz-Hervert et al. Age Ageing. 2012 Jul.

Abstract

Background: worldwide, the frequency of tuberculosis among older people almost triples that observed among young adults.

Objective: to describe clinical and epidemiological consequences of pulmonary tuberculosis among older people.

Methods: we screened persons with a cough lasting more than 2 weeks in Southern Mexico from March 1995 to February 2007. We collected clinical and mycobacteriological information (isolation, identification, drug-susceptibility testing and IS6110-based genotyping and spoligotyping) from individuals with bacteriologically confirmed pulmonary tuberculosis. Patients were treated in accordance with official norms and followed to ascertain treatment outcomes, retreatment, and vital status.

Results: eight hundred ninety-three tuberculosis patients were older than 15 years of age; of these, 147 (16.5%) were 65 years of age or older. Individuals ≥ 65 years had significantly higher rates of recently transmitted and reactivated tuberculosis. Older age was associated with treatment failure (OR=5.37; 95% CI: 1.06-27.23; P=0.042), and death due to tuberculosis (HR=3.52; 95% CI: 1.78-6.96; P<0.001) adjusting for sociodemographic and clinical variables.

Conclusions: community-dwelling older individuals participate in chains of transmission indicating that tuberculosis is not solely due to the reactivation of latent disease. Untimely and difficult diagnosis and a higher risk of poor outcomes even after treatment completion emphasise the need for specific strategies for this vulnerable group.

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