| Literature DB >> 26290807 |
Abstract
In well-resourced settings the systematic use of rapid diagnostics tests (e.g. pneumococcal urinary antigen test) that define the causal pathogen to direct therapy has not resulted in significantly improved outcomes in adults with pneumonia. The management of pneumonia in many low-resource settings is complicated by a substantial burden of tuberculosis and HIV-associated opportunistic infections, in addition to the usual spectrum of pathogens seen in well-resourced settings. Clinical features alone do not reliably distinguish between these different aetiologies and physicians often have to treat empirically. Given the limitations in diagnostic laboratory capability present in most low-resource settings, rapid and point-of-care diagnostic tests could become valuable tools to guide treatment decisions. Pneumococcal and Legionella urinary antigen tests are specific and moderately sensitive, but their utility in low-resource settings is uncertain. The Cepheid Xpert MTB/RIF platform and rapid assays for urinary lipoarabinomannan can substantially speed up tuberculosis diagnosis; the current challenge is to translate this into earlier treatment and hopefully improve patient outcome. In HIV-infected patients, 1-3-β-D-glucan is a serum marker of Pneumocystis jirovecii infection with excellent sensitivity. Further studies are needed to assess the clinical utility and cost-effectiveness of these rapid diagnostics assays when they incorporated into treatment algorithms.Entities:
Keywords: 1-3-β-D-glucan; BinaxNOW Streptococcus pneumoniae urinary antigen; Xpert MTB/RIF; lipoarabinomannan
Year: 2014 PMID: 26290807 PMCID: PMC4538792 DOI: 10.15172/pneu.2014.5/444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pneumonia (Nathan) ISSN: 2200-6133
Characteristics of the Streptococcus pneumoniae urinary antigen test (BinaxNOW-SP; Alere, USA) for the diagnosis of pneumococcal pneumonia
| Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|
Urine specimen is easy to obtain and no processing needed Minimal laboratory infrastructure and operator training required Rapid results (≤15 minutes) High specificity Incremental improvement in sensitivity when combined with blood and sputum culture Remains positive after starting antibiotics Facilitates early targeting of antibiotic treatment | High cost Polymicrobial infection not identified No information on antimicrobial resistance Insufficient sensitivity to exclude pneumococcal pneumonia Early narrowing of antibiotic treatment not of proven benefit and may be deleterious |
Diagnostic tests for pulmonary tuberculosis: current, under evaluation and in development
| Test | Comments | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| Chest radiography | Used as adjunct to smear microscopy. No radiographic pattern diagnostic of TB and substantial inter-observer variation. Appearances vary with immune status in HIV-associated disease. |
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| Sputum smear microscopy | Rapid and widely available; often sole diagnostic test. Sensitivity is poor, particularly in HIV-associated TB; increased by sputum concentration and fluorescence microscopy rather than ZN staining. |
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| Sputum culture | Gold-standard diagnostic test; often restricted to reference centres in resource-limited settings. Automated liquid culture systems (e.g. BACTEC MGIT 960; Becton Dickinson, USA) are faster and more sensitive than solid culture techniques. |
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| Xpert MTB/RIF (Cepheid, USA) | Fully automated NAAT platform; allows rapid detection of MDRTB. More sensitive than sputum smear microscopy, particularly in HIV-infection. High setup and running costs; needs uninterrupted electrical supply. |
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| Line probe assay (e.g. GenoType MTBDR | NAAT mainly used for rapid identification of isoniazid mono-resistance and MDRTB in culture isolates. Now adapted for use on clinical specimens; comparable accuracy to Xpert MTB/RIF. |
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| Loop-mediated isothermal amplification | Simplified, manual NAAT for use in basic laboratory settings. Currently in large scale evaluation; estimated sensitivity is 88% overall and 56% in sputum smear-negative TB. |
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| Urinary lipoarabinomannan (e.g. Alere Determine TB LAM Ag; Alere, USA) | POC assay facilitating rapid treatment initiation. Most sensitive in advanced HIV-infection; incremental increase in sensitivity over sputum smear microscopy and Xpert MTB/RIF alone. | |
| Volatile organic compounds | Mass spectrographic analysis of exhaled breath for compounds associated with pulmonary TB. In early stages of development; requires sophisticated instrumentaion. |
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| Serological tests | Humoral response to TB is highly variable; no single antibody measurement proved useful in diagnosis. Assays based on simultaneous detection of multiple antibodies in development. |
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| Proteomics | Serum proteomic profile of active TB derived by mass spectrometry. Diagnostic tests based on candidate biomarkers in development. |
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TB, tuberculosis; ZN, Ziehl-Neelsen; NAAT, nucleic-acid amplification test; MDRTB, multi-drug resistant tuberculosis; POC, point-of-care.
Summary of diagnostic tests for Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP)
| Test | Comments | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| Microscopy | ||
| Cell wall stains (e.g. Toluidine Blue O, calcofluor white) | Identification of cysts or trophozoites in BALF or lung biopsy specimens; ‘gold-standard’ diagnostic method. | |
| Trophozoite stains (e.g. Grocott’s methenamine silver, Diff-Quick) | Immunofluorescence more sensitive than cytochemical stains. Only suitable for use with bronchoscopic or induced-sputum specimens. | |
| Immunofluorescence | Training needed for accurate and consistent reporting. | |
| Molecular assays | ||
| PCR | Several genetic loci evaluated (e.g. mtLSUrRNA, HSP70, ITS, DHFR, MSG). | |
| nPCR | High assay sensitivity may lead to false positive result if colonised with Pneumocystis; new quantitative assays have improved specificity. | |
| qPCR | May be used with oral wash and upper respiratory tract specimens with reasonable sensitivity. | |
| Serum assays | ||
| 1-3-β-D-glucan | Cell wall component of Pneumocystis; highly sensitive marker of PCP. Other invasive fungal infections and some antibiotics may cause false positive results. | |
| S-adenosylmethionine | Essential metabolic intermediate; scavenged from host during active Pneumocystis infection such that serum levels are depleted. Poor diagnostic capability. |
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BALF, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; PCR, single-round polymerase chain reaction; nPCR, nested PCR; qPCR, quantitative (real-time) PCR; mtLSUrRNA, mitochondrial large subunit rRNA; HSP70, heat shock protein 70; ITS, internal transcribed spacers; DHFR, dehydrofolate reductase; MSG, multicopy major surface glycoprotein; PCP, Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia
Figure 1An algorithm for the investigation of adults hospitalised with pneumonia in low-resource settings. Initial antimicrobial choice is determined following an assessment of disease severity. Initial investigations are selected on the basis of disease severity, HIV status, and the clinical likelihood of TB. Further investigations are performed in patients that fail to respond to initial treatment. This algorithm should be considered in conjunction with clinical features; empirical treatment for TB or PCP may be appropriate.