ABSTRACT
Diffuse or multifocal tuberculosis (TB) accounts for 9% to 10% of cases of extrapulmonary TB and carries a poor prognosis with a mortality rate of 16% to 25%. Forty-nine cases of multifocal TB defined as involvement of two extrapulmonary sites with or without pulmonary TB were reviewed. Mean patient age (+/- SD) was 50 +/- 18 years. Twenty-three per cent of patients were immigrants. A history of TB and contact with a TB patient were found in 23% and 18% of cases, respectively. Of the 52% of immunocompromised patients, 38% were HIV-positive. The skin tuberculin test was positive in 67% of cases. Mean time from symptom onset to admission was 80 +/- 77 days (median, 58 days). The 49 patients had a total of 128 TB foci. Six patients had positive blood cultures. The tubercle bacillus was recovered from the extrapulmonary sites in 88% of cases. Mean treatment duration was nine months. Recovery from the TB was achieved in 64% of cases. The overall mortality rate was 47%, and 33% of patients died as the direct result of TB. Most deaths occurred in immunocompromised patients. A high index of suspicion for multifocal TB should be maintained in immunocompromised patients, even those who test negative for the HIV.