Prior tuberculosis, radiographic lung abnormalities and prevalent diabetes in rural South Africa
Alison C. Castle, Yumna Moosa, Helgard Claassen, Sheela Shenoi, Itai Magodoro, Jennifer Manne-Goehler, Willem Hanekom, Ingrid V. Bassett, Emily B. Wong, Mark J. Siedner

TL;DR
A study in rural South Africa found that people with a history of tuberculosis and lung abnormalities are less likely to have diabetes.
Contribution
This study is the first to show an inverse association between post-TB lung abnormalities and diabetes prevalence in a South African population.
Findings
Among people with prior TB, lung abnormalities were associated with a 29% reduction in diabetes odds.
Higher CAD4TB scores (indicating more severe lung disease) were linked to lower diabetes prevalence in TB survivors.
The association between lung abnormalities and diabetes was not observed in people without a TB history.
Abstract
Growing evidence suggests that chronic inflammation caused by tuberculosis (TB) may increase the incidence of diabetes. However, the relationship between post-TB pulmonary abnormalities and diabetes has not been well characterized. We analyzed data from a cross-sectional study in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, of people 15 years and older who underwent chest X-ray and diabetes screening with hemoglobin A1c testing. The analytic sample was restricted to persons with prior TB, defined by either (1) a self-reported history of TB treatment, (2) radiologist-confirmed prior TB on chest radiography, and (3) a negative sputum culture and GeneXpert. Chest X-rays of all participants were evaluated by the study radiologist to determine the presence of TB lung abnormalities. To assess the relationships between our outcome of interest, prevalent diabetes (HBA1c ≥6.5%), and our exposure of interest,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis · Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia detection and treatment
