Purpose Exploring whether smoking is an influencing factor for the inconsistency between QuantiFERONTB Gold assay (QFT-GIT) and tuberculosis etiology. Patients and Methods The clinical data of patients who were confirmed… Click to show full abstract
Purpose Exploring whether smoking is an influencing factor for the inconsistency between QuantiFERONTB Gold assay (QFT-GIT) and tuberculosis etiology. Patients and Methods The clinical data of patients who were confirmed positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) after undergoing QFT-GIT testing from September 2017 to August 2021 were retrospectively analyzed. Chi-square and rank-sum tests were used to compare the differences in characteristics between smokers and non-smokers. Logistic regression was used to adjust for confounding factors affecting smoking. Propensity score matching (PSM) was used to verify the above conclusions again. Results Positive results of tuberculosis etiology were adopted as the standard, the incidence of inconsistent results between QFT-GIT and tuberculosis etiology was 8.90% (108/1213), of which the false negative rate was 6.27% (76/1213) and the indeterminate rate was 2.64% (32/1213). In the overall population, the smokers had a lower level of basal IFN-γ (Z=−2.079, P=0.038). Among 382 elderly (≥65 years old) patients, the smokers had lower levels of antigen-stimulated IFN-γ (Z=−2.838, P=0.005). After performing BOX-COX transformation on all non-normally distributed data, logistic stepwise regression was used to adjust confounding factors. The results showed that smoking was an influencing factor for the inconsistency between QFT-GIT and tuberculosis etiology results (OR=1.69, P=0.020). Using PSM for 1:2 matching, the results showed that smoking was still an independent risk factor for the inconsistent results of QFT-GIT and tuberculosis etiology (OR= 1.95, P=0.019). Age-stratified analysis showed that smoking was an independent risk factor in discordance between QFT-GIT and tuberculosis etiology in patients aged ≥65 years (OR=2.40, P=0.005), but not in patients aged <65 years (P > 0.05). Conclusion Smoking can reduce the body’s IFN-γ release ability, and smoking (especially the elderly) is an influencing factor for the inconsistency between QFT-GIT and tuberculosis etiological results.
               
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