Nontuberculous Mycobacteria Infections in Children: A Clinical Overview of Diagnosis and Management
Alessandra Li Pomi, Antonella Gambadauro, Francesca Galletta, Giuseppe Fabio Parisi, Salvatore Leonardi, Pietro Sciacca, Milena La Spina, Sara Manti

TL;DR
This paper reviews the diagnosis and treatment of nontuberculous mycobacteria infections in children, highlighting challenges in distinguishing them from tuberculosis and the need for better tools and guidelines.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive clinical overview and identifies key challenges and research priorities for managing NTM infections in children.
Findings
Cervicofacial lymphadenitis is the most common NTM infection in immunocompetent children.
Diagnosis of NTM infections is complicated by overlapping symptoms with tuberculosis.
Treatment is hindered by prolonged drug courses, drug intolerance, and lack of child-friendly formulations.
Abstract
Nontuberculous Mycobacteria (NTM), often referred to as environmental or atypical mycobacteria, are opportunistic pathogens phylogenetically as well as clinically distinct from both the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and Mycobacterium leprae. In the pediatric age group, NTM disease manifests with a diverse range of clinical phenotypes. Cervicofacial lymphadenitis stands out as the most common presentation among children who are immunocompetent. Conversely, skin and soft tissue infections, pulmonary disease and disseminated infections constitute less prevalent, yet clinically important, disease forms. Accurate identification is paramount, as differentiating NTM infections from tuberculosis (TB) remains challenging based solely on clinical symptoms, initial laboratory analyses, or standard radiological findings. This distinction is critical because treatment protocols for NTM…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMycobacterium research and diagnosis · Infectious Diseases and Tuberculosis · Tuberculosis Research and Epidemiology
