Stephen D Lawn1, Andrew D Kerkhoff, Monica Vogt, Robin Wood. 1. The Desmond Tutu HIV Centre, Institute for Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa. stevelawn@yahoo.co.uk
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: A low-cost point-of-care urine assay for lipoarabinomannan (LAM) used for screening patients prior to antiretroviral therapy (ART) rapidly diagnoses a proportion of tuberculosis (TB) cases. We determined the characteristics and outcomes of such patients. METHODS: Adults enrolling in a South African township ART clinic were systematically screened for pulmonary TB by testing paired sputum samples using microscopy, liquid culture and Xpert MTB/RIF in a centralized laboratory. Stored urine samples were retrospectively tested for LAM using the Determine TB-LAM assay, but results did not inform treatment. Patients were followed up in the routine ART service and early (90-day) programmatic outcomes were determined. Analysis was restricted to those with CD4 cell counts below 200 cells/μl. RESULTS: Of patients with CD4 cell counts below 200 cells/μl and complete results (n=325), 59 (18.2%) had culture-positive TB. Of these, 23 (39%) patients tested urine LAM-positive and 36 (61%) urine LAM-negative. Patients with LAM-positive TB had much lower CD4 cell counts, higher plasma viral loads, lower haemoglobin concentrations and lower BMIs compared to those with LAM-negative TB. They also had evidence of higher mycobacterial load, more frequently testing sputum smear-positive, Xpert-positive (sputum and urine) and having a shorter time to sputum culture positivity. Of five (8.5%) patients who died, four did so before TB treatment was started. All five retrospectively tested LAM-positive. CONCLUSIONS: A low-cost point-of-care urine test for LAM rapidly diagnoses a sub-group of cases with advanced HIV-associated TB and poor prognosis. If used in combination with laboratory-based diagnostics, treatment delays would decrease and survival might be improved.
OBJECTIVE: A low-cost point-of-care urine assay for lipoarabinomannan (LAM) used for screening patients prior to antiretroviral therapy (ART) rapidly diagnoses a proportion of tuberculosis (TB) cases. We determined the characteristics and outcomes of such patients. METHODS: Adults enrolling in a South African township ART clinic were systematically screened for pulmonary TB by testing paired sputum samples using microscopy, liquid culture and Xpert MTB/RIF in a centralized laboratory. Stored urine samples were retrospectively tested for LAM using the Determine TB-LAM assay, but results did not inform treatment. Patients were followed up in the routine ART service and early (90-day) programmatic outcomes were determined. Analysis was restricted to those with CD4 cell counts below 200 cells/μl. RESULTS: Of patients with CD4 cell counts below 200 cells/μl and complete results (n=325), 59 (18.2%) had culture-positive TB. Of these, 23 (39%) patients tested urine LAM-positive and 36 (61%) urine LAM-negative. Patients with LAM-positive TB had much lower CD4 cell counts, higher plasma viral loads, lower haemoglobin concentrations and lower BMIs compared to those with LAM-negative TB. They also had evidence of higher mycobacterial load, more frequently testing sputum smear-positive, Xpert-positive (sputum and urine) and having a shorter time to sputum culture positivity. Of five (8.5%) patients who died, four did so before TB treatment was started. All five retrospectively tested LAM-positive. CONCLUSIONS: A low-cost point-of-care urine test for LAM rapidly diagnoses a sub-group of cases with advanced HIV-associated TB and poor prognosis. If used in combination with laboratory-based diagnostics, treatment delays would decrease and survival might be improved.
Authors: Yukari C Manabe; William Worodria; Frank van Leth; Harriet Mayanja-Kizza; Afsatou Ndama Traore; Josefo Ferro; Nadine Pakker; Matthias Frank; Martin P Grobusch; Robert Colebunders; Frank Cobelens Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg Date: 2016-10-17 Impact factor: 2.345
Authors: Karen R Steingart; Ian Schiller; David J Horne; Madhukar Pai; Catharina C Boehme; Nandini Dendukuri Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2014-01-21
Authors: R W Kubiak; J T Herbeck; S M Coleman; D Ross; K Freedberg; I V Bassett; P K Drain Journal: Int J Tuberc Lung Dis Date: 2018-11-01 Impact factor: 2.373
Authors: Stephen D Lawn; Peter Mwaba; Matthew Bates; Amy Piatek; Heather Alexander; Ben J Marais; Luis E Cuevas; Timothy D McHugh; Lynn Zijenah; Nathan Kapata; Ibrahim Abubakar; Ruth McNerney; Michael Hoelscher; Ziad A Memish; Giovanni Battista Migliori; Peter Kim; Markus Maeurer; Marco Schito; Alimuddin Zumla Journal: Lancet Infect Dis Date: 2013-03-24 Impact factor: 25.071