Pulmonary Granulomas and Mycobacterial Infection: Concordance between the Results of Special Stains Performed on Lung Tissue Sections and Tissue Cultures

2Citations
Citations of this article
7Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Background: The most common cause of infectious pulmonary granulomas worldwide is Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The diagnosis is based on clinical presentation, histopathologic findings, detection of acid-fast bacilli (AFB) in tissue or sputum using special stains, and/or isolation of mycobacteria in cultures or via PCR-based methods. Different studies have shown that high levels of discrepancy exist between these diagnostic approaches in lung tissue specimens. Objective: To assess the degree of concordance between the results of special stains and cultures on lung tissue specimens in the diagnosis of mycobacterial infections. Methodology: Eighty-seven patients with a diagnosis of granulomas (necrotizing and non-necrotizing) on lung tissue specimens were identified. Cohen’s kappa was used to measure the general concordance between the results of the histopathological examination (special stains) and bacteriological tissue cultures. Results: With Kinyoun acid-fast stains, 8/48 (16.7%) cases were positive for AFB. With FITE stains, 10/57 (17.5%) cases were positive for AFB. There was strong agreement between Kinyoun acid-fast and FITE stains (Kappa = 0.806; p-value < 0.001). Tissue cultures were performed on 38/87 cases (43.7%), and 10/38 (26.3%) of the cultures were positive for mycobacteria. There was no concordance between Kinyoun acid-fast stains or FITE stains and tissue cultures results. Conclusion: Our observations represent an initial step in the process of reviewing the two methods used at our institution to diagnose mycobacterial infections on lung tissue specimens and highlight the need of incorporating more advanced diagnostic methods such as PCR to confirm mycobacterial infections and improve patient management. Importantly, species-level identification of mycobacteria is necessary to guide treatment.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Bahmad, H. F., Azimi, R., Kilinc, E., Tuda, C., & Vincentelli, C. (2022). Pulmonary Granulomas and Mycobacterial Infection: Concordance between the Results of Special Stains Performed on Lung Tissue Sections and Tissue Cultures. Diseases, 10(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases10040096

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free