| Literature DB >> 12453354 |
Jill M Northrup1, Ann C Miller, Edward Nardell, Sharon Sharnprapai, Sue Etkind, Jeffrey Driscoll, Michael McGarry, Harry W Taber, Paul Elvin, Noreen L Qualls, Christopher R Braden.
Abstract
We estimated direct medical and nonmedical costs associated with a false diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) caused by laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis cultures in Massachusetts in 1998 and 1999. For three patients who received misdiagnoses of active TB disease on the basis of laboratory cross-contamination, the costs totaled U.S. dollars 32618. Of the total, 97% was attributed to the public sector (local and state health departments, public health hospital and laboratory, and county and state correctional facilities); 3% to the private sector (physicians, hospitals, and laboratories); and <1% to the patient. Hospitalizations and inpatient tests, procedures, and TB medications accounted for 69% of costs, and outpatient TB medications accounted for 18%. The average cost per patient was dollars 10873 (range, dollars 1033-dollars 21306). Reducing laboratory cross-contamination and quickly identifying patients with cross-contaminated cultures can prevent unnecessary and potentially dangerous treatment regimens and anguish for the patient and financial burden to the health-care system.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12453354 PMCID: PMC2738552 DOI: 10.3201/eid0811.020387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Cost inventory for three patients who received misdiagnoses of active tuberculosis disease on the basis of laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis specimensa
| Patient | Public sectorb | Private sectorc |
|---|---|---|
| Direct medical costs | ||
| TB medications | Outpatient visits TB medications and PPD DOT provision Tests and procedures Contact investigations Hospitalizations | Outpatient visits TB medications and PPD Tests and procedures Contact investigations Hospitalizations |
| Direct nonmedical costs | ||
| Case managementd Overheade |
aTB, tuberculosis; PPD, purified protein derivative of tuberculin; DOT, directly observed therapy. bLocal and state public health departments, public health hospital and laboratory, and county and state correctional facilities. cPrivate physicians, hospitals, and laboratories. dHealth department case management and administrative support. eOverhead costs, including rent, utilities, and supplies.
Characteristics of patients who received misdiagnoses of active tuberculosis disease resulting from laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis specimensa
| Characteristics | Patient 1 | Patient 2 | Patient 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic information | |||
| Age at diagnosis (yrs) | 59 | 29 | 38 |
| Sex | Female | Male | Male |
| Clinical information | |||
| Site of disease | Lymphatic | Pulmonary | Soft tissue, right index finger |
| Symptoms when examined | Chronic cough, weight loss, increasing fatigue, night sweats (Sept 1998) | Abdominal discomfort, diarrhea, flank pain, high fever, cough with blood, delirium tremens (Nov 1998) | Infection of right index finger,b great pain, lymphangitic streaks up arm (Aug 1998) |
| Radiology, initial | CAT scan: lymphadenopathy, densities in upper lobes suggestive of infiltration or scarring | Chest x-ray: right lower lobe infiltrate, improved with intravenous ceftriaxone | X-ray right hand: swelling over right index DIP and PIP joints; chest x-ray: normal |
| Pathology | Lymph node biopsy positive for lymphoma, chemotherapy started | Not applicable | Not done/missing |
| TST result | Negative | Negative | Negative |
| Underlying conditions and TB risk factors | History of Hodgkin lymphoma and treatment for active TB disease in 1995,c non–U.S.-born | History of chronic alcohol abuse and cocaine use | HIV positive, history of IVDU and incarceration |
| TB health care | |||
| TB health-care provider | Private physician | Public health department TB clinic | Public health department TB clinic, correctional facility clinic |
| Type of TB therapy | Self-administered | Daily DOT by public health nurse | Daily DOT by correctional facility staff |
| Duration of TB therapy | <1 month (started Dec 1998) | <2 months (started Dec 1998) | 11 months (treated for 2 weeks in Oct 1998, restarted December 1998) |
| Hospitalization(s) following TB diagnosis | 5 days in private hospital (Jan 1999) with increasing respiratory distress, treated for community acquired pneumonia, died of presumed progression of non–Hodgkin lymphoma | 11 days in private hospital with acute gastritis secondary to alcohol abuse (Jan 1999), TB therapy discontinued secondary to increased LFTs; 15 days at public health hospital for TB management; TB ruled out | 8 days at public health hospital to start anti-TB therapy and rule out pulmonary and bone involvement (Oct 1998); 5 days in correctional facility infirmary |
| Contact investigations | |||
| By public health department | Not done | One household contact identified, TST-negative | Not done |
| By hospital infection control | Not done | Not done | Not done |
| Information on cross-contaminated specimen | |||
| Specimen type | Right inguinal lymph node tissue | Sputum | Swab of finger cellulitis |
| AFB smear result | Negative | Negative | Negative |
| AFB culture result | 1 colony at 60 days (reported Dec 1998), sensitive to INH, RIF, EMB, Strep (PZA not tested) | 1 colony at 40 days (reported Dec 1998), slightly resistant to INH | “Rare” colonies at 42 days (reported Sept 1998), INH resistant |
| NTGSN IS | 10-band pattern (reported April 1999), RFLP match to an isolate from a known TB patient | 9-band pattern (reported April 1999), RFLP match to an isolate from a known TB patient | 16-band pattern (reported Oct 1999), RFLP match to laboratory control strain H37Ra |
| Case appraisal resultsd | |||
| Case diagnosis | Lymphoma, nosocomial bacterial pneumonia | Community-acquired pneumonia | Streptococcus cellulitis |
| Did laboratory cross-contamination occur? | Likely | Likely | Likely |
aTST, tuberculin skin test; TB, tuberculosis; CAT, computerized axial tomograpy; AFB, acid-fast bacilli; NTGSN, National Tuberculosis Genotyping and Surveillance Network; RFLP, restriction fragment length polymorphism; INH, isoniazid; RIF, rifampin; EMB, ethambutol; Strep, streptomycin; PZA, pyrazinamide; DOT, directly observed therapy; LFTs, liver function tests; DIP, distal interphalangeal; PIP, proximal interphalangeal; and IVDU, intravenous drug use. bInfection of right index finger ultimately resulting in amputation; specimen grew Streptococcus Group A. cPatient treated for active TB disease in 1995, although there was not enough evidence to verify the case for national surveillance. dCase appraisals performed by a panel of three TB investigators representing other NTGSN sentinel sites.
Estimated costs for three patients who received misdiagnoses of active tuberculosis disease on the basis of laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis specimensa,b
| Cost category | Estimated costs (U.S.$) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | Patient 2 | Patient 3 | Total | |
| Case managementc | 226 | 288 | 100 | 614 |
| Outpatient visits | 186 | 58 | 443 | 687 |
| TB medications and PPD | 175 | 606 | 5,061 | 5,842 |
| DOT provisiond | 0 | 508 | 868 | 1,376 |
| Tests and procedures | 134 | 1,904 | 2,703 | 4,741 |
| Contact investigationse | 0 | 10 | 0 | 10 |
| Hospitalizationsf | 312 | 6,905 | 12,131 | 19,348 |
| Total | 1,033 | 10,279 | 21,306 | 32,618 |
aCosts reported in 1999 U.S. dollars, rounded to the nearest whole dollar. Costs adjusted to 1999 dollars by using the Medical Care group of the Consumer Price Index. bTB, tuberculosis; PPD, purified protein derivative of tuberculin; DOT, directly observed therapy. cPersonnel time for health department case management and administrative support. dPersonnel time to provide directly observed therapy ePersonnel time to perform contact testing. fDaily inpatient bed rate and differential for transfer to isolation room.