结核病发病机制和治疗结果的性别差异。

3区 医学 Q2 Medicine
Djeneba Dabitao, William R Bishai
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引用次数: 0

摘要

结核病仍然是世界上许多国家令人生畏的公共卫生问题。全球结核病流行病学的一个一致观察结果是,与女性相比,男性活动性肺结核病例过多。来自人类和动物的数据也表明,雄性比雌性更容易患上活动性肺病。同样,男性也与不良的治疗结果有关。尽管有越来越多的证据,但人们对结核病中性别偏见的驱动机制知之甚少。已经提出了两个主要假设来解释活动性肺结核在男性中的优势。第一个是基于生物因素,如性激素和遗传因素,对结核病期间宿主免疫的贡献。第二个是关注非生物学因素,如吸烟、职业暴露和寻求健康的行为,已知这些因素会受到性别的影响。在本章中,我们通过介绍人类和实验动物研究,回顾了关于这两个主要假设的文献。此外,我们提出了旨在研究性别和性别对其他临床形式结核病的影响的研究,如潜伏性结核病感染和肺外结核病,这两种疾病似乎都有其与性别相关的特异性。我们还强调了结核病背景下性别和性别之间的潜在交叉点,并分享了未来的方向,这些方向可以指导阐明结核病发病机制和治疗结果中基于性别的差异的机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sex and Gender Differences in Tuberculosis Pathogenesis and Treatment Outcomes.

Tuberculosis remains a daunting public health concern in many countries of the world. A consistent observation in the global epidemiology of tuberculosis is an excess of cases of active pulmonary tuberculosis among males compared with females. Data from both humans and animals also suggest that males are more susceptible than females to develop active pulmonary disease. Similarly, male sex has been associated with poor treatment outcomes. Despite this growing body of evidence, little is known about the mechanisms driving sex bias in tuberculosis disease. Two dominant hypotheses have been proposed to explain the predominance of active pulmonary tuberculosis among males. The first is based on the contribution of biological factors, such as sex hormones and genetic factors, on host immunity during tuberculosis. The second is focused on non-biological factors such as smoking, professional exposure, and health-seeking behaviors, known to be influenced by gender. In this chapter, we review the literature regarding these two prevailing hypotheses by presenting human but also experimental animal studies. In addition, we presented studies aiming at examining the impact of sex and gender on other clinical forms of tuberculosis such as latent tuberculosis infection and extrapulmonary tuberculosis, which both appear to have their own specificities in relation to sex. We also highlighted potential intersections between sex and gender in the context of tuberculosis and shared future directions that could guide in elucidating mechanisms of sex-based differences in tuberculosis pathogenesis and treatment outcomes.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The review series Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology provides a synthesis of the latest research findings in the areas of molecular immunology, bacteriology and virology. Each timely volume contains a wealth of information on the featured subject. This review series is designed to provide access to up-to-date, often previously unpublished information.
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