| Literature DB >> 24857613 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The tuberculosis (TB) case detection rate has stagnated at 60% due to disorganized case finding and insensitivity of sputum smear microscopy. Of the identified TB cases, 4% die while being treated, monitored with tools that insufficiently predict failure/mortality.Entities:
Keywords: case finding; clinical score; diagnosis; health status indicator; low-resource setting; mortality prediction; reliability; triage
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24857613 PMCID: PMC4032506 DOI: 10.3402/gha.v7.24303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Action ISSN: 1654-9880 Impact factor: 2.640
Existing CPRs for TB
| Authors, year | Aim | Type of patient | Outcome predicted |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aguiar et al. ( | Predictive model for PTB for a more rational decision on the use of isolation rooms. | Patients suspected of having TB admitted to isolation rooms (Cough >2 weeks+radiologic abnormality, or respiratory symptom+confirmed/suspected HIV-infection). | PTB (Isolation of |
| Rakoczy et al. ( | Stratifying patients suspected of having TB (use of isolation rooms). | All adult in-patients with newly diagnosed PTB on the basis of positive results from sputum or bronchoscopes fluid culture (retrospective). | AFB positive results from sputum or bronchoscopy fluid culture. |
| Solari et al. ( | Guides decision to isolate patients with pulmonary complaints suggestive of PTB. | Aged 18 years+productive cough for ≥7 days; cough of any duration+constitutional symptoms (fever ≥3 days, night sweats, or weight loss ≥3 kg in the previous month); hemoptysis or a differential diagnosis of PTB from the attending physician. | Culture positive TB. |
| Wisnivesky et al. ( | Identify early predictors of the need for respiratory isolation. | Patients with positive culture compared to patients who had handed in a sputum sample but were culture negative. | Culture positive PTB. |
| Alavi-Naini et al. ( | Identify characteristics that identify individuals with SN PTB. | Negative sputum smears for AFB and remaining symptomatic after a course of broad spectrum antibiotics. | Culture confirmed SN PTB. |
| Mello et al. ( | Predictive model for SN PTB among outpatients. | Patients with cough ≥3 weeks, and two consecutive samples of spontaneous sputum that were AFB-negative, or an absence of expectorated sputum. | Confirmed SN PTB: positive culture for |
| Soto et al. ( | CPR to diagnose SN PTB. | Patients admitted to emergency department with cough ≥1 week+one or more of the following: fever (38°C), weight loss (≥4 kg in a month), constitutional symptoms (malaise or hyporexia for ≥2 weeks) or dyspnea. | Culture confirmed SN PTB. |
| Alcântara et al. ( | Identify socio-demographic, clinical, and behavioral factors that are associated with PTB. | Older than 14 years of age; having sought medical attention spontaneously; presenting with cough ≥2 weeks; willing to provide at least one sputum sample and undergo chest X-ray. | Positive culture for |
| Fournet et al. ( | Identify a subgroup of ‘TB suspects’ who qualify for diagnostic investigations. | Male in-mates aged ≥18 years. | Active TB: sputum smear – culture positive. Or a positive clinical and radiological response to specific treatment. |
| Corbett et al. ( | Investigate the effect of HIV on the prevalence of TB symptoms and on the diagnostic utility of different screening strategies. | Individuals with current cough, hemoptysis during the previous year, self-reported fever or ‘hot body’, night sweats and a subjective report of weight loss, or who tested positive on sputum culture during screening (i.e. culture-positive). | Sputum culture – positive for |
| Hanifa et al. ( | Determine prevalence of previously undiagnosed active TB among ART-eligible adults. Evaluate the performance of combinations of symptoms and standard investigations in the diagnosis of TB. | ART-eligible (WHO Stage 4 or CD4<200 cells/mm3) adults (aged >17 years). | Compatible clinical or radiological features and sputum culture-positive for |
| Horita et al. ( | Estimating the prognosis of an individual TB patient. | Smear positive, HIV uninfected, treatment susceptible. | Death |
| Wejse et al. ( | Develop a simple clinical score for repeated clinical status – evaluation of TB patients during treatment. | Pulmonary TB patients (smear positive and negative), HIV-infected and -uninfected. | Change during TB treatment. Mortality. |
TB=tuberculosis; PTB=pulmonary TB; CPR=clinical prediction rule; SN=smear negative; Mtb=mycobacterium tuberculosis; AFB=acid fast bacilli; ART=anti retroviral treatment; HIV=human immunodeficiency virus.
TBscore and TBscoreII.
| Score | ||
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Variables included | TBscore | TBscoreII |
|
| ||
| Cough | 1 | 1 |
| Hemoptysis | 1 | – |
| Dyspnea | 1 | 1 |
| Chest pain | 1 | 1 |
| Night sweats | 1 | – |
|
| ||
| Anemia | 1 | 1 |
| Pulse >90 beats/min | 1 | – |
| Positive finding at lung auscultation | 1 | – |
| Temperature >37°C | 1 | – |
| BMI<18 | 1 | 1 |
| BMI<16 | 1 | 1 |
| MUAC<220 mm | 1 | 1 |
| MUAC<220 mm | 1 | 1 |
| Total number of points possible | 13 | 8 |
BMI=body mass index; MUAC=mid upper arm circumference.
Overview of the studies constituting the thesis
| Study | Research question | Methodology | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| I: Bandim TB score: reliability and comparison with the KPS ( | Assessing the variability between two physicians in performing the Bandim TB score (TBscore). | Prospective assessment of the TBscore and the KPS of 100 PTB patients at inclusion and/or at follow-up visits (at second, fourth, and sixth month of treatment). | Inter-observer variability of the TBscore varied from slight to almost perfect. |
| II: TBscore II: refining and validating a simple clinical score for treatment monitoring of patients with PTB ( | Simplify the TBscore, proposing TBscoreII. | EFA on observational data from 565 PTB patients from Bissau. | Proposal of TBscoreII. |
| III: Can TB case-finding among health-care-seeking adults be improved? – Observations from Bissau ( | Assess the potential benefit of elsewhere applied predictors and TBscore/TBscoreII, in PTB case finding. | Observational prospective cohort study assessing TBscore/TBscoreII and other clinical predictors in adults seeking health care for cough, weight loss and/or sputum production (PTB suspects). | Cough> 2 weeks had the best diagnostic ability overall. |
TB=tuberculosis; PTB= pulmonary TB; KPS=Karnofsky Performance Score; ICC=intra-class correlation coefficient; ES=effect size; EFA=exploratory factor analysis; HIV=human immunodeficiency virus.
Fig. 1TBscore(II) at treatment start and subsequent failure/mortality.
Fig. 2Referred patients and missed PTB cases using selected predictors as criterion.