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Cerebral Toxoplasmosis Mimicking Subacute Meningitis in HIV-Infected Patients; a Cohort Study from Indonesia

Cerebral Toxoplasmosis Mimicking Subacute Meningitis in HIV-Infected Patients; a Cohort Study from Indonesia
A. RizaI Ganiem, Sofiati Dian, Agnes Indriati, Lidya Chaidir, Rudi Wisaksana, Patrick Sturm, Willem MeIchers, Andre van der Ven, Ida Parwati, Relnout van Crevel
Universitas Padjadjaran, PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, January 2013 Volume 7 Issue 1 e1994, www.plosntds.org
Bahasa Inggris
Universitas Padjadjaran, PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, January 2013 Volume 7 Issue 1 e1994, www.plosntds.org

Background: HIV-associated subacute meningitis is mostly caused by tuberculosis or cryptococcosis, but often no etiology can be established. In the absence of CT or MRI of the brain, toxoplasmosis is generally not considered as part of the differential diagnosis. Methodology/Principal Findings: We performed cerebrospinal fluid real time PCR and serological testing for Toxoplasma goridii in archived samples from a well-characterized cohort of 64 HIV-infected patients presenting with subacute meningitis in a referral hospital in Indonesia. Neuroradiology was only available for 6 patients. At time of presentation, patients mostly had newly diagnosed and advanced HIV infection (median CD4 count 22 cells/mL), with only 17.2% taking ART, and 9.4% P-113 -prophylaxis. CSF PCR for I Gondii was positive in 21 patients (32.8%). Circulating toxoplasma lgG was present in 77.2% of patients tested, including all in whom the PCR of CSF was positive for T. Gondii. Clinically, in the absence of neuroradiology, toxoplasmosis was difficult to distinguish from tuberculosis or cryptococcal meningitis, although CSF abnormalities were less pronounced. Mortality among patients with a positive CSF T.Gondli PCR was 81%, 2.16-fold higher (95% Cl 1.04-4.47) compared to those with a negative PCR. Conclusions/Significance: Toxo plasm osis should be considered in HIV-infected patients with clinically suspected subacute meningitis in settings where neuroradiology is not available.

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