Tuberculosis/cryptococcosis co-infection in China between 1965 and 2016

Open Access
Authors
  • W. Fang
  • L. Zhang
  • J. Liu
  • D.W. Denning
  • F. Hagen
  • W.-W. Jiang
  • N. Hong
  • S. Deng
  • X. Lei
  • D. Deng
  • W. Liao
  • J. Xu
  • T. Boekhout
  • M. Chen
  • W. Pan
Publication date 23-08-2017
Journal Emerging Microbes & Infections
Article number e73
Volume | Issue number 6
Number of pages 7
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
Cases of tuberculosis/cryptococcosis co-infection are rapidly increasing in China. However, most studies addressing this co-infection have been published in Chinese journals, and this publication strategy has obscured this disease trend for scientists in other parts of the world. Our investigation found that 62.9% of all co-infection cases worldwide were reported in the Chinese population (n=197) between 1965 and 2016, and 56.3% of these Chinese cases were reported after 2010. Nearly all cases originated from the warm and wet monsoon regions of China. HIV-positive subjects tended to correlate with more severe manifestations of a tuberculosis/cryptococcosis co-infection than those without HIV. Notablely, dual tubercular/cryptococcal meningitis was the most frequent (54.0%) and most easily misdiagnosed (95.2%, n=40/42) co-infection. We also found that the combined use of cerebrospinal fluid pressure and concentrations of glucose, protein and chlorine might be an inexpensive and effective indicator to differentiate tubercular/cryptococcal co-infection meningitis from tubercular meningitis and cryptococcal meningitis.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary materials
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/emi.2017.61
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emi201761 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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