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Table 4 Frequency distribution of helminth infection among adult TB patients in Dar es Salaam (urban) and Ifakara (rural), Tanzania

From: Distinct clinical characteristics and helminth co-infections in adult tuberculosis patients from urban compared to rural Tanzania

Helminth infection

All, n (%)

Urban

Rural

P-value

n (%)

95% CI

n (%)

95% CI

Total

668 (100)

460 (68.9)

 

208 (31.1)

  

Any helminth infection a

154 (23.1)

118 (25.7)

21.7–29.6

36 (17.3)

12.2–22.5

0.018

Soil-transmitted helminths infections b

Strongyloides stercoralis

89 (13.3)

79 (17.2)

14.4–21.5

10 (4.8)

1.9–7.8

<  0.001

 Hookworm

45 (6.7)

26 (5.7)

3.7–8.1

19 (9.1)

5.3–13.2

0.12

Ascaris lumbricoides

2 (0.3)

2 (1.0)

Trichuris trichiura

5 (0.8)

2 (0.4)

3 (1.4)

Schistosomiasis

Schistosoma mansoni b

15 (2.3)

8 (1.7)

0.57–3.1

7 (3.4)

0.9 to 5.9

0.21

Schistosoma mansoni c

53 (7.9)

19 (4.13)

2.4–6.2

34 (16.4)

11.4–21.6

< 0.001

  1+

19 (43.2)

0

19 (63.3)

  2+

6 (13.6)

0

6 (20.0)

  3+

19 (43.2)

14 (100)

 

5 (16.7)

Schistosoma haematobium d

19 (2.8)

16 (3.5)

1.9–5.4

3 (1.4)

Multiple helminth infection

0.63

 None

471 (70.5)

322 (70.0)

65.8–74.2

149 (71.6)

65.5–77.7

 

 Mono-infection

159 (23.8)

108 (23.5)

19.6–27.4

51 (24.5)

18.7–30.3

 

 Infection with ≥2 species

16 (2.4)

10 (2.2)

0.86–3.5

6 (2.9)

0.62–5.2

 
  1. TB Tuberculosis, POC-CCA Point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen
  2. aIncluding POC-CCA positive tests (Schistosoma mansoni)
  3. bBased on stool microscopy
  4. cBased on POC-CCA test only
  5. dBased on urine filtration