| Literature DB >> 28774293 |
Swe Swe Thit1,2, Ne Myo Aung1,2, Zaw Win Htet2, Mark A Boyd3,4, Htin Aung Saw1, Nicholas M Anstey5, Tint Tint Kyi2,6, David A Cooper4, Mar Mar Kyi1,2, Josh Hanson7,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of the point-of-care lateral flow lipoarabinomannan (LF-LAM) test may expedite tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis in HIV-positive patients. However, the test's clinical utility is poorly defined outside sub-Saharan Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical management; Diagnostic test; Human immunodeficiency virus; Lipoarabinomannan; Myanmar; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28774293 PMCID: PMC5543584 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0888-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Study profile. No patients were lost to follow-up during the study period
Fig. 2Clinical course of patients enrolled as inpatients. aOne case of TB meningitis, one case of miliary TB. bOne case of suspected TB meningitis. cOne case of microbiologically confirmed cryptococcal meningitis. dTwo cases of suspected Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia
Fig. 3Clinical course of patients enrolled as outpatients. aOne case of suspected miliary TB, one case of suspected TB meningitis. bOne case of confirmed TB meningitis (rifampicin resistant on Xpert MTB/RIF assay). cTwo cases of suspected TB meningitis, one case of suspected miliary TB, one case of suspected toxoplasmosis, one case of HIV cachexia. dOne case of confirmed cryptococcal meningitis, one case of suspected toxoplasmosis
Association between LF-LAM test results on enrolment, patient characteristics and subsequent clinical course
| All patients | Negative test | Positive | Positive | Positive | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 34 (30–41) | 34 (30–41) | 34 (29–41) | 34 (28–42) | 34 (28–45) |
| Male sex | 259 (50%) | 158 (50%) | 101 (50%) | 22 (51%) | 9 (45%) |
| Enrolled as inpatient | 54 (10%) | 19 (6%) | 35 (17%)*** | 15 (35%)*** | 10 (50%)*** |
| Symptoms of systemic TB a | 169 (33%) | 90 (29%) | 79 (39%)* | 32 (74%)*** | 16 (80%)*** |
| Cough in last month | 116 (22%) | 56 (18%) | 60 (30%)*** | 23 (53%)*** | 12 (60%)*** |
| Current cigarette smoker | 150 (29%) | 88 (28%) | 62 (31%) | 16 (37%) | 8 (40%) |
| Current tobacco chewing | 222 (43%) | 133 (42%) | 89 (44%) | 23 (53%) | 11 (55%) |
| Hazardous alcohol consumption | 71 (14%) | 31 (10%) | 40 (20%)*** | 13 (30%)*** | 6 (30%)* |
| Body mass index | 20.8 (18.8–23.1) | 21.2 (19.3–23.5) | 20.4 (18.6–22.7)* | 19.5 (17.8–22.0)** | 19.4 (17.6–22.0) |
| Recent subjective weight loss | 235 (45%) | 135 (43%) | 100 (50%) | 30 (70%)*** | 15 (75%)** |
| Abnormal respiratory examination | 28 (5%) | 8 (3%) | 20 (10%)*** | 11 (26%)*** | 6 (30%)*** |
| On anti-retroviral therapy | 360 (70%) | 225 (71%) | 135 (67%) | 24 (56%)* | 9 (45%)* |
| On isoniazid prophylaxis therapy | 14 (3%) | 9 (3%) | 5 (2%) | 1 (2%) | 0 |
| CD4 T-cell count, cells/mm3 b | 270 (128–443) | 289 (151–481) | 233 (95–409)* | 112 (55–264)*** | 71 (31–159)*** |
| Haemoglobin, g/dLb | 10.5 (9.2–12.2) | 10.7 (9.4–12.1) | 10.1 (9.0–12.0) | 9.1 (8.1–10.2)*** | 8.6 (6.5–10.1)*** |
| White cell count, × 109/Lb | 6.9 (5.3–8.7) | 6.9 (5.4–8.6) | 6.9 (5.3–8.9) | 6.3 (5.4–10.5) | 6.1 (4.5–6.2) |
| Lymphocytes, × 109/Lb | 1.7 (1.2–2.5) | 1.8 (1.3–2.5) | 1.7 (1.1–2.4) | 1.3 (0.5–2.2)** | 0.8 (0.4–1.6)*** |
| Platelets, × 109/Lb | 291 (225–357) | 288 (219–348) | 295 (239–375) | 277 (224–330) | 276 (216–332) |
| Creatinine, μmol/Lb | 85 (72–98) | 85 (72–97) | 86 (73–98) | 80 (74–98) | 84 (68–114) |
| Total bilirubin, μmol/Lb | 13.2 (7.8–17.1) | 12.6 (7.8–17.3) | 13.5 (7.8–16.9) | 15.0 (6.7–16.9) | 12.5 (5.5–16.2) |
| Abnormal chest X-rayb | 186 (38%) | 102/294 (35%) | 84/190 (44%)* | 17/40 (43%) | 9/18 (50%) |
| Gross abnormality on chest X-rayb | 57 (12%) | 29/294 (10%) | 28/190 (15%) | 8/40 (20%) | 3/18 (17%) |
| TB diagnosis at 1 months | 37 (7%) | 10 (3%) | 27 (13%)*** | 14 (33%)*** | 8 (40%)*** |
| TB diagnosis at 3 months | 44 (9%) | 12 (4%) | 32 (16%)*** | 16 (37%)*** | 8 (40%)*** |
| TB diagnosis at 6 months | 54 (10%) | 18 (6%) | 36 (18%)*** | 17 (40%)*** | 9 (45%)*** |
| Empirical TB therapy at 1 monthc | 33 (7%) | 17 (6%) | 16 (9%) | 5 (17%)* | 1 (8%) |
| Empirical TB therapy at 3 monthsc | 84 (18%) | 45 (15%) | 39 (23%)* | 11 (41%)*** | 6 (50%)** |
| Empirical TB therapy at 6 monthsc | 123 (27%) | 71 (24%) | 52 (32%) | 13 (50%)** | 6 (55%)* |
| Dead at 1 month | 5 (1%) | 3 (1%) | 2 (1%) | 2 (5%)* | 1 (5%) |
| Dead at 3 months | 13 (3%) | 7 (2%) | 6 (3%) | 5 (12%)*** | 4 (20%)*** |
| Dead at 6 months | 16 (3%) | 10 (3%) | 6 (3%) | 5 (12%)*** | 4 (20%)*** |
| Complicated coursed | 205 (40%) | 101 (32%) | 104 (52%)*** | 35 (81%)*** | 18 (90%)*** |
| False-positive LF-LAM teste | 97 (19%) | – | 97 (48%) | 8 (19%) | 2 (10%) |
All values represent absolute number (%), or median (interquartile range)
* P < 0.05, ** P <0.01, *** P ≤ 0.001 (comparisons using Kruskal–Wallis and χ2 tests at the different cut-offs)
aCough, fever, weight loss or night sweats in last month
bOne patient did not have a CD4 count recorded at enrolment; 103 (20%) patients did not have an available haemoglobin; 107 (21%) did not have an available white blood cell count; 110 (21%) did not have an available lymphocyte count; 111 (21%) did not have an available creatinine; 143 (28%) did not have an available platelet count; 33 (6%) patients did not have an available chest-X-ray report
cDoes not include the patients prescribed anti-TB therapy for a microbiologically confirmed diagnosis
dComplicated course: death, hospitalisation, confirmed TB diagnosis or initiation of empirical anti-TB therapy in the 6 months of follow-up
ePositive LF-LAM test on enrolment, but no death, hospitalisation, confirmed TB diagnosis or initiation of empirical anti-TB therapy in the 6 months of follow-up
LF-LAM lateral flow lipoarabinomannan, TB tuberculosis
Fig. 4Ability of the LF-LAM test to predict important clinical endpoints in inpatients with TB symptoms. aIncludes the 6 patients with confirmed TB and 10 patients who had empirical anti-TB therapy started. bAll 7 patients had empirical anti-TB therapy started. PPV positive predictive value, NPV negative predictive value, both presented as percentage (95% confidence interval)
Characteristics of the patients who died during follow-up
| Age, Gender | CD4 T-cell counta | On ARTa | On IPTa | Initial enrolment | LF-LAM resulta | TB symptomsb | Anti-TB therapy before deathc | Time of deathd | Cause of deathe |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23, Female | 56 | Yes | No | Inpatient | Positive grade 3 | Yes | Empirical | 3 days | Suspected TB meningitis |
| 32, Female | 59 | No | No | Inpatient | Positive grade 2 | Yes | Directed | 29 days | Confirmed TB meningitis |
| 28, Female | 14 | No | No | Inpatient | Positive grade 3 | Yes | Directed | 34 days | Confirmed miliary TB |
| 28, Female | 144 | Yes | No | Inpatient | Positive grade 4 | Yes | No | 87 days | Confirmed cryptococcal meningitis |
| 33, Female | 61 | No | No | Inpatient | Negative | Yes | No | 131 days | Suspected |
| 26, Female | 53 | Yes | No | Inpatient | Negative | Yes | No | 3 days | Suspected |
| 48, Male | 114 | Yes | No | Outpatient | Positive grade 1 | No | Empirical | 63 days | Suspected miliary TB |
| 36, Male | 54 | Yes | No | Outpatient | Positive grade 3 | Yes | Empirical | 79 days | Suspected TB meningitis |
| 38, Female | 121 | Yes | No | Outpatient | Negative | No | Empirical | 72 days | Suspected miliary TB |
| 60, Female | 96 | No | No | Outpatient | Negative | No | Empirical | 169 days | HIV related cachexia (died at home) |
| 39, Male | 512 | Yes | No | Outpatient | Negative | No | Directed | 69 days | Confirmed TB meningitis |
| 34, Male | 495 | Yes | No | Outpatient | Negative | No | No | 159 days | Confirmed cryptococcal meningitis |
| 37, Male | 39 | Yes | No | Outpatient | Negative | No | Empirical | 83 days | Suspected cerebral toxoplasmosis |
| 31, Male | 46 | Yes | No | Outpatient | Negative | Yes | Empirical | 82 days | Suspected TB meningitis |
| 35, Female | 107 | Yes | No | Outpatient | Negative | No | No | 27 days | Suspected cerebral toxoplasmosis |
| 36, Male | 80 | No | No | Outpatient | Negative | Yes | Empirical | 26 days | Suspected TB meningitis |
aOn enrolment
bCough, fever, weight loss or night sweats in last month
cThree patients had directed therapy based on positive Xpert MTB/RIF assay on sputum
dDays after study enrolment
eLikely cause of death determined by attending clinician at time of death, unaware of LF-LAM result. Insufficient laboratory support to confirm diagnosis in most cases. Confirmed TB based on positive Xpert MTB/RIF assay of sputum. Confirmed cryptococcal meningitis based on India ink of cerebrospinal fluid. Suspected cerebral toxoplasmosis based on CT imaging results and clinical features. Suspected Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia based on clinical and radiological features
ART antiretroviral therapy, IPT isoniazid prophylaxis therapy LF-LAM lateral flow lipoarabinomannan, TB tuberculosis