4.6 Article

Accuracy and impact of Xpert MTB/RIF for the diagnosis of smear-negative or sputum-scarce tuberculosis using bronchoalveolar lavage fluid

Journal

THORAX
Volume 68, Issue 11, Pages 1043-1051

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2013-203485

Keywords

Tuberculosis

Funding

  1. EU-FP7 award [TBSusgent F3-2008-223340]
  2. EDCTP [TB-NEAT IP.09.32040.009]
  3. South African National Research Foundation
  4. Claude Leon Foundation
  5. Wellcome Trust
  6. Discovery Foundation
  7. Fogarty International Clinical Research Scholars/Fellows Support Centre National Institutes of Health [R24TW007988]
  8. SATBAT
  9. EDCTP (TB-NEAT, TESA)
  10. SA DST
  11. NRF (SARChI)

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Rationale The accuracy and impact of new tuberculosis (TB) tests, such as Xpert MTB/RIF, when performed on bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) obtained from patients with sputum-scarce or smear-negative TB is unclear. Methods South African patients with suspected pulmonary TB (n=160) who were sputum-scarce or smear-negative underwent bronchoscopy. MTB/RIF was performed on uncentrifuged BALF (1ml) and/or a resuspended pellet of centrifuged BALF (approximate to 10ml). Time to TB detection and anti-TB treatment initiation were compared between phase one, when MTB/RIF was performed as a research tool, and phase two, when it was used for patient management. Results 27 of 154 patients with complete data had culture-confirmed TB. Of these, a significantly lower proportion were detected by smear microscopy compared with MTB/RIF (58%, 95% CI 39% to 75% versus 93%, 77% to 98%; p<0.001). Of the 127 patients who were culture negative, 96% (91% to 98%) were MTB/RIF negative. When phase two was compared with phase one, MTB/RIF reduced the median days to TB detection (29 (18-41) to 0 (0-0); p<0.001). However, more patients initiated empirical therapy (absence of a positive test in those commencing treatment) in phase one versus phase two (79% (11/14) versus 28% (10/25); p=0.026). Consequently, there was no detectable difference in the overall proportion of patients initiating treatment (26% (17/67; 17% to 37%) versus 36% (26/73; 26% to 47%); p=0.196) or the days to treatment initiation (10 (1-49) versus 7 (0-21); p=0.330). BALF centrifugation, HIV coinfection and a second MTB/RIF did not result in detectable changes in accuracy. Conclusions MTB/RIF detected TB cases more accurately and more rapidly than smear microscopy and significantly reduced the rate of empirical treatment.

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