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Tuberculosis (TB)

NICE guideline [NG33] Tuberculosis. Last updated: Feb 2024.

Background Information

Definitions

Tuberculosis (TB): infectious disease caused by bacteria of the mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, predominantly Mycobacterium tuberculosis

By Clinical State

  • Active TB: symptomatic form of TB
    • Pulmonary TB → active TB affecting the lungs; most common presentation (52.8% of UK cases in 2021)
    • Extrapulmonary TB → active TB involving other sites
    • Disseminated TB → TB affecting ≥2 organ systems
      • Miliary TB: subtype of disseminated TB caused by massive haematogenous spread of infection, producing numerous tiny nodules (1-2mm) throughout the lungs, which resemble millet seeds on imaging [Ref]

 

  • Latent Tb: asymptomatic form of TB, but with a state of persistent immune response to M.tuberculosis antigens, but no clinical or radiographic evidence of active disease 

By Natural History

Primary TB: [Ref]

  • Initial infection with mycobacterium tuberculosis in a previously unexposed invididual

Secondary (Post-primary OR Reactivation) TB[Ref]

  • Active TB that develops in a person with previous infection with mycobacterium tuberculosis, who either has latent infection (latent TB) OR prior history of primary tuberculosis
    • Most common cause → reactivation of latent TB, typically years after initial infection, often when host immunity is compromised
    • Less commonly → exogenous reinfection

By Drug Resistance

Multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) 

  • TB resistant to isoniazid and rifampicin 

Extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB)

  • MDR-TB that is also resistant to any fluoroquinolone and ≥1 Group A drug (bedaquiline or linezolid)

 

Epidemiology

Global 

  • Considered an epidemic 
  • Leading cause of death due to a single infectious agent (2nd only to COVID-19 in 2021)
    • Higher mortality burden in children
  • Latent Tb is common (~1/4 of world’s population)

England/UK

  • Low-incidence country
  • Most cases → pulmonary TB (52.8%)
  • Demographics
    • ~3/4 of cases = people born outside UK 
    • Much higher incidence in non-white ethnic groups
    • Men > women (60%)
  • Geography: London = 35% of all cases
  • Risk factors: strongly linked to deprivation 

Associated social characteristics → alcohol misuse, drug misuse, homelessness, imprisonment, mental health needs and asylum seeker status

Associated medical co-morbidities → diabetes, immunosuppression, cancer, steroid use, autoimmune disease

Aetiology

Species

Species Primary Host Transmission Key Distinguishing Feature Geography
M. tuberculosis Humans Airborne droplets Principal cause of human TB; can persist in latent state Global
M. bovis Cattle (zoonotic) Unpasteurised dairy; direct animal contact Intrinsically pyrazinamide-resistant; requires treatment modification Global (sporadic in humans, linked to bovine TB control)
M. africanum Humans Airborne (less transmissible) Restricted to West Africa; slower progression West Africa (rare outside except in immigrants)

Microbiological Features of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Type

  • Facultative  intracellular, rod-shaped bacillus 
  • Aerobic, very slow-growing
  • Mycobacterium species inc. Mycobacterium tuberculosis are examples Acid-fast bacilli (AFB)

Gram stain

  • Does not stain well due to lipid-rich  cell wall

Special stains (for AFB)

  • Ziehl-Neelsen (ZN): AFB appear red/pink against blue background OR
  • Auramine-rhodamine fluorescent stain: AFB appear reddish-yellow on fluorescence microscopy

Risk Factors

Demographic and Geographic Factors

  • Born in high-prevalence regions (>40 cases per 100,000/year).

  • Non–UK-born individuals have ~18-fold higher incidence than UK-born (most commonly from India, Pakistan, Romania, Somalia, Eritrea).

  • Male sex (≈60% of UK TB cases).

  • Children under 5 years – higher risk and more severe (often extrapulmonary) disease.

Exposure History

  • Close contact with individuals with active pulmonary or laryngeal TB

  • History of untreated or inadequately treated TB → increasing risk of recurrence and drug resistance

Medical Comorbidities
Most comorbidities increase risk through immunosuppression (esp. impaired cell-mediated immunity)

  • Immunodeficiency & haematological disorders → HIV infection (strongest risk factor for TB), haematological malignancies, post–solid organ transplantation (immunosuppressive therapy)
  • Metabolic and Systemic conditions  diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease (particularly on dialysis), cirrhosis, malnutrition
  • Drug-induced immunosuppression   prolonged high-dose corticosteroids, cytotoxic chemotherapy, biologic agents (e.g. anti–TNF-α drugs)
  • Local or structural predisposition → silicosis or other occupational lung diseases, previous gastrectomy or jejunoileal bypass surgery

 

Social and Environmental Determinants

  • Deprivation: those in the most deprived 10% of areas have >6× higher TB incidence
  • Crowded living conditions (e.g., hostel/shelter residency, prison/detention centres)
  • Homelesness

 

Lifestyle Factors

  • Excessive alcohol use
  • Injecting drug use (IVDU)
  • Smoking

Complications

Pulmonary

Complications due to structural parenchymal damage [Ref]

  • Lung cavitation
    • Infection predisposition
      • Aspergilloma → fungal ball developing in residual Tb cavities
      • Secondary bacterial infections (of cavities or damaged lung tissue)
    • Massive haemoptysis (erosion of blood vessels overlying a lung cavity)
  • Bronchiectasis
  • Lung fibrosis & scarring (restrictive lung disease)
  • COPD

Vascular and haemorrhagic complications 

  • Rasmussen aneurysm

Other 

  • Pneumothorax
  • Fibrosing mediastinitis
  • Cor pulmonale (secondary to chronic hypoxia / scarring)

 

Extrapulmonary Manifestations / Complications

System / Site Complication
Pleural Pleural effusion, chronic empyema
Cardiac Pericarditis → constrictive pericarditis or tamponade
Lymphatic (commonest form of extra-pulmonary TB) Tuberculous lymphadenitis (scrofula), mediastinal lymphadenopathy
Skeletal Osteomyelitis, Pott’s disease (spinal TB)
Genitourinary Renal scarring, ureteric strictures, infertility
Gastrointestinal Intestinal obstruction, perforation, malabsorption
Cutaneous Lupus vulgaris (most common form of cutaneous TB), scrofuloderma
Adrenal Tuberculous adrenalitis → Addison’s disease

 

Central Nervous System

  • Tuberculous meningitis → most common and severe manifetsation of CNS TB
  • Tuberculoma (granulomatous intracranial mass lesion)
  • Hyponatraemia (SIADH)

Prognosis

Prognosis depends on: drug susceptibility, HIV status, comorbidities, and treatment completion

Untreated active TB is slowly progressive and potentially fatal

Poor prognostic factors 

  • HIV co-infection → 2× higher mortality than HIV-negative individuals
  • Increasing age
  • Extensive or disseminated disease
  • Delayed diagnosis or incomplete treatment
  • Other immunosuppressive states: malnutrition, diabetes, CKD
  • Drug-resistance → worse outcomes, prolonged therapy, lower cure rates
    • XDR-TB worse prognosis than MDR-TB 

Overview

 

Characteristics Latent TB Primary TB Secondary TB 
Definition Persistent immune response to M. tuberculosis antigens, no clinical/radiographic evidence of active disease Initial infection following first exposure Active TB that develops in a person with previous infection with mycobacterium tuberculosis
Epidemiology ~1/4 of world’s population Minority of active TB cases (mainly occuring in children and immunologically naive individuals) majority of active TB cases
Pathogenesis Host immunity contains bacilli → dormant/persistent state inside granulomas Infection begins with a Ghon focus (hallmark of primary tuberculosis) ± spread to hilar nodes  (Ghon complex)

Typically affects the middle and lower lung zones

Immune response determines outcome: clearance, latency, or progression to active disease

Dormant bacilli resume replication when immunity wanes or risk factors are present

Typically affects the upper lung zones

Progression notes 5–10% lifetime risk of progression; greatest in the first 2 years.

Risk ↑ in HIV, immunosuppression, children <5y, comorbidities

~92% develop latency or self-clear infection

~8% progress to active disease within 10 years (most within first 2 years)

Characterised by higher infectious burden & disease severity
Infectivity Not infectious  Modestly infectious Highly infectious, especially cavitary pulmonary TB
Clinical features Asymptomatic Often asymptomatic OR

mild pnuemonic illness fever, cough, malaise, lymphadenopathy

Pronounced/Typical TB symptoms → 
Chronic cough, haemoptysis, fever, night sweats, weight loss
Radiographic features Normal CXR

Potential findings

  • calcified granulomas
  • fibronodular opacities
  • pleural thickening
middle/lower zone consolidation (or Ghon focus) ± ipsilateral hilar/mediastinal lymphadenopathy; pleural effusion possible; cavitation uncommon Upper lobe infiltrates, cavitation and/or fibrosis

BCG Vaccination

Indications

BCG vaccine is NOT part of the routine immunisation schedule in the UK, but is selectively offered to those at higher risk of TB exposure.

Mantoux -ve is the main requirement for ALL people before offering BCG vaccination:

  • +ve Mantoux test (induration ≥5 mm) are NOT given BCG as they are sensitised and vaccination is unnecessary

Main indications for BCG vaccine:

Category Specific Group
Neonates / children
  • Living in UK areas with TB incidence ≥40/100,000
  • With a parent / grandparent born in a country with TB incidence ≥40/100,000
Specific situations:
  • HIV +ve mother
  • Immunosuppressed mother
  • Family history of TB in the last 5 years
Close contact
  • Unvaccinated (no prior BCG), and
  • Mantoux -ve, and
  • Close contact with a patient with sputum smear-positive pulmonary / laryngeal TB
Occupational risk Unvaccinated <35 y/o healthcare workers are typically offered vaccination during occupational health screening

Healthcare workers:

  • Direct contact with TB patients or potentially infectious materials
  • Works in high-risk settings (e.g. TB clinics, infectious disease wards, pulmonary units, microbiology, pathology department, autopsy room)
  • Involved in care of high TB risk populations (e.g. prisoners, homeless people, asylum seekers, refugees, drug / alcohol misuse)

Latent TB Guidelines

Investigation and Diagnosis

1st line: Mantoux test (tuberculin skin testing) (+ve test defined by induration ≥5mm regardless of BCG history)

  • +ve Mantoux test → assess for active TB (see below)

 

  • If no signs of active TB
    • Offer treatment for latent TB
    • However, if more evidence of infection is needed to decide on treatment (e.g. requiring enhanced case management, or adverse events from treatment) → offer interferon-γ release assay

If testing in immunocompromised patients: offer Mantoux test and interferon-γ release assay

  • Immunocompromised individuals have a higher chance of false negatives on both tests; combining them increases the detection rate [Ref]
     

Diagnostic Tests Information

Mantoux test (tuberculin skin testing) Interferonγ release assay
Mechanism Test for T cell-mediated immunity against M. tuberculosis via:
  • Type IV hypersensitivity
Test for T cell-mediated immunity against M. tuberculosis-specific antigens via:
  • Measure amount of interferon-γ released by T cells using ELISA
Procedure 2 step-procedure:
  • Step 1: purified protein derivative injected intradermally
  • Step 2: measure the diameter of the induration (not the erythema) 48-72 hours later
1 step procedure:
  • Blood is drawn into test tubes
  • QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube assay used
Advantages
  • Inexpensive
  • Only requires a single visit to clinic
  • Preferred test in those with prior BCG vaccination
  • Results available within 24 hours
Limitations
  • Does not differentiate between latent and active TB
  • Requires 2 visits to clinic
  • False +ve from previous BCG vaccination or exposure to non-tuberculosis mycobacteria
  • False -ve in
    • Sarcoidosis
    • Immunosupressed
    • Recent live attenuated vaccination
    • <6 months old
    • Recent (8-10 weeks) or very old TB infection
    • Disseminated TB disease
  • Cannot differentiate between live and dead mycobacteria
  • Expensive

 

Management

Offer the following testing before starting treatment for latent TB:

  • HIV 
  • Hepatitis B and C 

NICE recommends either of the following regimens, depending on clinical circumstances:

Drugs Duation Indication
Rifampicin + isoniazid (+ pyridoxine) 3 months Shorter duration is preferred in <35 y/o if hepatotoxicity is a concern
Isonidazid (+ pyridoxine) 6 months To avoid rifampicin which is a potent liver enzyme inducer

Can be problematic in those with HIV and post-transplant due to the medications they need to take

 

Active TB Guidelines

Investigation and Diagnosis

Clinical Features

Note

  • Latent TB is asymptomatic
  • Primary TB is commonly asymptomatic/minimally symptomatic
  • Typical features of active pulmonary tuberculosis are mainly seen in secondary TB

Pulmonary TB: [Ref 1] [Ref 2]

Symptoms 

  • Systemic symptoms (gradual onset, reflecting chronic infection)
    • B symptoms: Low-grade fever, night sweats, weight loss (often significant)
    • Anorexia
    • Malaise & weakness

 

  • Pulmonary symptoms
    • Persistent cough (often >2-3 weeks)
      • Progressive nature: initially dry, later productive / haemoptysis with disease progression
    • Sputum production (may become purulent)
    • Haemoptysis (blood-streaked or frank) → classic but less frequent finding
    • Dyspnoea
    • Pleuritic chest pain (suggests pleural involvement)

Physical Examination Findings

Often nonspecific and may be normal in early disease

  • General 
    • Pallor (anaemia of chronic disease)
    • Clubbing (advanced or chronic cases)
    • Cachexia / generaliesd wasting
    • Tuberculous lymphadenitis → lymphadenopathy (esp. supraclavicular/cervical)

 

  • Chest examination
    • Variable findings depending on disease stage and lung site affected:
      • Consolidation → dullness to percussion, coarse crackles, diminished breath sounds
      • Cavitation → hyperresonance on percussion
      • Bronchial obstruction → wheeze
      • Pleural effusion / Empyema → stony dull percussion, reduced/absent breath sounds
  • Other
    • Erythema nodosum (uncommon, but classic cause)

 

Diagnostic Guidelines

Adults

1st line test: chest X-ray

If X-ray appearance suggests TB → perform microbiology sample testing (definitive testing):

  • Obtain 3 deep cough sputum respiratory samples (preferably 1 early morning sample)
    • If patient unable to produce sputum → induce sputum or bronchoscopy and lavage

 

  • Send for microscopy, culture and histology
  • Ideally, before starting treatment (otherwise within 7 days of starting treatment)

Request NAAT for M. tuberculosis complex if:

  • HIV +ve patient, or
  • Rapid information about species would affect management, or
  • Large contact-tracing initiative

Children

1st line: NAAT for M. tuberculosis complex (M. tuberculosis, M. bovis, M. africanum)

Diagnostic Tests Information

Chest X-ray findings:

Primary TB Post-primary (reactivation) TB
Typically affects middle / lower lobes
  • Ghon complex (Ghon focus + involved regional lymph node, usually hilar lymph node)
  • Hilar lymphadenopathy (usually unilateral)
  • Consolidation (homogenous with ill-defined borders)
Typically affects upper lobes
  • Patchy consolidation with cavitary lesions (common)
  • Fibrosis

Microbiological tests:

Test Description Advantages Disadvantages
Acid-fast bacilli smear microscopy
  • Ziehl Neelsen / auramine stain applied
  • Sample visualised under the microscope
  • Rapid detection
  • Low sensitivity
  • Cannot differentiate between M. tuberculosis and other non-tuberculosis mycobacteria
  • Cannot differentiate between live and dead mycobacteria (both will stain)
Culture Gold standard diagnostic test
  • Provides information on drug susceptibility
  • High sensitivity
  • Identify exact species
  • Identify drug resistance
  • Takes 2-6 weeks for positive culture to develop
NAAT Use as initial testing
  • High sensitivity and specificity
  • Rapid detection
  • Detection of drug-resistant strains
  • Low cross-reactivity with non-tuberculosis mycobacteria
  • Cannot differentiate between live and dead mycobacteria (both will be detected)
  • Requires laboratory equipment and trained staff

 

Management

If there are clinical features consistent with a diagnosis of TB, start treatment without waiting for culture results.

Standard TB Treatment (Drug-Susceptible TB)

Refer to TB specialist once diagnosis is made.

Standard Treatment (No CNS Involvement)

  • Initial phase: 2 months of RIPE – rifampicin + isoniazid (+ pyridoxine) + pyrazinamide + ethambutol, then
  • Continuation phase: 4 months of rifampicin isoniazid (+ pyridoxine)

Active TB with CNS Involvement

  • Initial phase: 2 months of RIPE – rifampicin + isoniazid (+ pyridoxine) + pyrazinamide + ethambutol, then
  • Continuation phase: 10 months of rifampicin isoniazid (+ pyridoxine)

Also offer adjunctive corticosteroid (dexamethasone or prednisolone) at the start of anti-TB treatment regimen

  • Start with high dose initially, then gradually withdraw it over 4-8 weeks

Drug-Resistant TB Treatment

If multidrug-resistant TB is suspected clinically, perform NAAT for rifampicin resistance

Choice of drug:

Drug resistance Recommended treatment
Rifampicin
  • Treat with at least 6 drugs
  • Test for resistance to 2nd line drugs
Isoniazid
  • Initial phase (first 2 months): rifampicin + pyrazinamide + ethambutol
  • Continuation phase (for 7 months): rifampicin + ethambutol
Pyrazinamide
  • Initial phase (first 2 months): rifampicin + isoniazid (+ pyridoxine) + ethambutol
  • Continuation phase (for 7 months): rifampicin + isoniazid (with pyridoxine)
Ethambutol
  • Initial phase (first 2 months): rifampicin + isoniazid (+ pyridoxine) + pyrazinamide
  • Continuation phase (for 4 months): rifampicin + isoniazid (with pyridoxine)

Detailed management of drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR/XDR-TB) is beyond the expected knowledge level for the UKMLA.
This information is included for completeness and to provide clinical context. In practice, all cases of suspected or confirmed MDR-TB are managed by specialist infectious disease or respiratory teams in consultation with UKHSA.

Infection Control

If suspected or confirmed pulmonary / laryngeal TB → place patient in single room

If suspected or confirmed multidrug-resistant TB → place patient in single room (if low risk) or negative pressure room (if high risk)

Contact Tracing

If pulmonary or laryngeal TB is diagnosed → offer screening to close contacts (social contacts are not necessary)

  • If symptomatic → test for active TB (i.e. chest X-ray first line)
  • If asymptomatic
    • >65 y/o → consider chest X-ray (if abnormal → testing for active TB)
    • ≤65 y/o → Mantoux test to test for latent TB and consider BCG vaccination (if no prior vaccination and Mantoux -ve)

References

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