Analysis of the changing trends and epidemiological characteristics of hospitalized elderly patients with drug-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis in a designated hospital in Beijing
10.3760/cma.j.issn.0254-9026.2025.07.007
- VernacularTitle:北京某定点医院住院老年人耐药肺结核的变化趋势及流行特点分析
- Author:
Bo LI
1
;
Xiyu SHANG
;
Yumeng DONG
;
Yuqing CAO
;
Huifang ZHANG
;
Jiuhong LI
;
Yan MA
Author Information
1. 首都医科大学附属北京胸科医院/北京市结核病胸部肿瘤研究所中医科,北京 101149
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Tuberculosis, pulmonary;
Drug-resistant tuberculosis;
Epidemiological characteristic;
Trend
- From:
Chinese Journal of Geriatrics
2025;44(7):883-890
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To analyze the epidemiological characteristics and changing trends of elderly patients with drug-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis(DR-PTB)at Beijing Chest Hospital, Capital Medical University, in order to provide references for clinical prevention and treatment.Methods:Data were retrospectively collected from all DR-PTB cases hospitalized in the electronic medical record system of Beijing Chest Hospital from 2019 to 2023.The epidemiological characteristics including classification, gender, age, occupation and their changing trends among elderly DR-PTB patients were analyzed.Results:Among 1 981 hospitalized DR-PTB patients, 400(20.19%)were elderly[aged 60-92 years, mean(68.67±7.01)years], showing an overall increasing trend from 2019 to 2023.Mono-resistant PTB was the most common(198 cases, 49.50%), followed by multidrug-resistant PTB(170 cases, 42.50%), extensively drug-resistant PTB(21 cases, 5.25%), and polyresistant PTB(11 cases, 2.75%).Among the elderly DR-PTB patients, 287 cases(71.75%)were male, 200 cases(50.00%)were initial treatment cases, 377 cases(94.25%)were Han nationality, 165 cases(41.25%)were Beijing residents, 185 cases(46.25%)were employees of enterprises and institutions, 109 cases(27.25%)were farmers, 68 cases(17.00%)were unemployed individuals, 202 cases(50.50%)were pathogen-positive cases(smear and culture positive), and 228 cases(57.00%), 331 cases(82.75%), 196 cases(49.00%)were patients with comorbidities, complications, and extrapulmonary tuberculosis, respectively.There were no significant differences between elderly and non-elderly groups in ethnicity, treatment classification, or comorbidities(all P>0.05).However, significantly differences were found in gender ( χ2=12.718, P<0.001), occupation ( χ2=97.500, P<0.001), patient origin ( χ2=119.771, P<0.001), pathogen detection results ( χ2=10.101, P=0.001), and drug resistance patterns ( χ2=15.990, P=0.001).The proportion of elderly DR-PTB patients showed an overall increasing trend, with rises in females(25.64%-28.70%), unemployed individuals(7.69%-20.37%), other occupations(5.13%-19.40%), Han ethnicity(91.03%-99.07%), initial treatment(33.33%-57.41%), smear-negative but culture-positive cases(46.15%-53.70%), polyresistant PTB(1.28%-9.26%), and extensively drug-resistant PTB(1.28%-3.70%). Conclusions:Among elderly DR-PTB patients, the proportions of female, unemployed individuals and other occupations, initial treatment cases, smear-negative but culture-positive cases, polyresistant PTB, and extensively drug-resistant PTB are increasing annually.Future efforts should focus on targeted prevention and treatment for key populations to further reduce the rate of elderly DR-PTB.