Literature DB >> 17392025

Short-term bleach digestion of sputum in the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in patients co-infected with HIV.

L Lawson1, M A Yassin, A Ramsay, E N Emenyonu, T D Thacher, P D O Davies, S B Squire, L E Cuevas.   

Abstract

The bleach digestion of sputum may improve the yield of smear microscopy but has not been validated in patients with HIV. Therefore we assessed the performance of bleach-digested smear microscopy among patients with HIV. One thousand three hundred and twenty one patients with chronic cough submitted three sputum samples for direct smear microscopy and were offered HIV tests. One sample was selected for a bleach-digested smear and another one was cultured. Patients were classified as having 'definite' (>or=2 positive smears), 'very likely' (smear-negative, culture- positive), 'less likely' (one smear-positive, culture-negative) and 'unlikely' (smear and culture negative) tuberculosis (TB). In all, 566/1045 (54%) patients were HIV positive and 731/1186 (62%) were culture positive. The digested smears were positive in 123/125 (98%) 'definite', 4/118 (3%) 'very likely' and 1/174 'unlikely' TB patients with HIV and in 125/127 (98%) 'definite', 2/74 (3%) 'very likely', 4/4 'less likely' and 2/127 'unlikely' TB without HIV. Three direct smears identified 252 (57%) and one digested smear 254 (57%) of the 444 patients with 'definite' or 'very likely' TB. One bleach-digested smear performed similarly to three direct smears. Both methods were less sensitive in HIV-positive patients. Further studies are needed to compare the performance of the two methods under operational conditions.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17392025     DOI: 10.1016/j.tube.2007.02.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tuberculosis (Edinb)        ISSN: 1472-9792            Impact factor:   3.131


  3 in total

Review 1.  Novel developments in the epidemic of human immunodeficiency virus and tuberculosis coinfection.

Authors:  Asha Anandaiah; Keertan Dheda; Joseph Keane; Henry Koziel; David A J Moore; Naimish R Patel
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2010-12-22       Impact factor: 21.405

2.  A pilot study of short-duration sputum pretreatment procedures for optimizing smear microscopy for tuberculosis.

Authors:  Peter Daley; Joy Sarojini Michael; Kalaiselvan S; Asha Latha; Dilip Mathai; K R John; Madhukar Pai
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-05-20       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Sensitivity of direct versus concentrated sputum smear microscopy in HIV-infected patients suspected of having pulmonary tuberculosis.

Authors:  Adithya Cattamanchi; David W Dowdy; J Lucian Davis; William Worodria; Samuel Yoo; Moses Joloba; John Matovu; Philip C Hopewell; Laurence Huang
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2009-05-06       Impact factor: 3.090

  3 in total

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