| Literature DB >> 30531026 |
Peter M Mbelele1, Sagal Y Mohamed2, Elingarami Sauli3, Emmanuel A Mpolya3, Sayoki G Mfinanga4, Kennedy K Addo5, Scott K Heysell2, Stellah G Mpagama1.
Abstract
Early and accurate diagnosis and rigorous clinical and microbiological monitoring of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) treatment can curb morbidity and mortality. While others are still under evaluation, the World Health Organization has recommended few novel molecular methods for MDR-TB diagnosis only. We present current molecular methods for diagnosis and monitoring of MDR-TB treatment in TB-endemic settings. A systematic meta-narrative review was conducted according to the RAMESES recommendations. Electronic databases were searched for relevant articles published in English language from January 2013 to June 2018. Based on predefined criteria, two independent reviewers extracted the key messages from relevant articles. Disagreement between them was resolved through discussion and the involvement of a third reviewer, if needed. Key messages were synthesized to create the meta-narratives for method's accuracy, drug-susceptibility capability, and laboratory infrastructure required. We included 33 articles out of 1213 records retrieved, of which 16 (48%) and 12 (36%) were conducted in high- and low-TB-endemic settings, respectively. Xpert® MTB/RIF, GenoType MTBDRplus, GenoType MTBDRsl, FlouroType™ MTBDR, TB TaqMan® array card, and DNA sequencers can accurately guide effective treatment regimens. Molecular bacterial load assay quantifies mycobactericidal impact of these regimens. Although they present inherent advantages compared to the current standard of care, they carry important limitations to implementation and/or scale-up. Therefore, considerable effort must now be directed to implementation and health systems research to maximize these forecasted benefits for individual patient's health outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-tuberculosis therapy; diagnosis; drug-resistant tuberculosis; molecular methods; monitoring
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30531026 PMCID: PMC6548176 DOI: 10.4103/ijmy.ijmy_135_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mycobacteriol ISSN: 2212-5531
Characteristics of articles and molecular methods evaluated in adults with multidrug resistance tuberculosis
| Author and year | Country | Purpose | Target biomarker | Specimen tested | Sample size | Performance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rice | USA | Detects MTBC and | A 560 region of MTBC DNA and 81-bp
of RRDR in the codons 507–533 of the | Sputum | 751 | 100% sensitivity and 98% specificity |
| Guenaoui | Algeria | DST of RIF | Sputum | 50 | Sensitivity and specificity arc 100% | |
| Chikaonda | Malawi | Sputum | 348 | Sensitivity and specificity of 100% | ||
| Huang | China | 1062 | 97% sensitivity and 98% specificity | |||
| Chakravorty | USA | Sputum | 277 | 93% sensitivity and 98% specificity | ||
| Dorman | South Africa, Uganda, Kenya, India, China, Georgia, Belarus, and Brazil | Sputum | 314 | 95% sensitivity and 98% specificity | ||
| Chakravorty | USA | Detects MTBC and DST of FQs and SLIDs (AMK and KAN), and INH | Sputum | 24 | 100% sensitivity for all targets and >94% specificity compared to sanger sequencing. Using phenotypic DST, Sensitivity for FQ is 75% and 100% for INH and AMK, KAN. Specificity 100% for INH and FQ and 94% for SLIDS | |
| Xie | China and South Korea | MTBC isolates | 308 | Using culture/genotypic DST, sensitivity for INH, FQs and SLIDs is 83/96%, 88/98% and 71/93% respectively. Specificity was 94/99% | ||
| Chen | China | Detects MTBC and DST of RIF and INH, the MDR-TB defining anti-TB agents | Sputum | 427 | 86% sensitivity and 96% specificity for RIF; and 77 and 95% for INH. 70% sensitivity and 97% specificity for detecting MDR-TB and >70% accuracy against culture | |
| Karimi | Morocco | Sputum | 70 | 92 and 97% sensitivity for RIF and INH respectively with 100% Specificity | ||
| Lin | Taiwan | Sputum | 5838 | Sensitivity and specificity for RIF were 92 and 97% and 78% and 100% for INH. 83% sensitivity and 100% specificity for detecting MDR-TB, and >95% test accuracy | ||
| Maharjan | South Africa | Sputum | 69 | Sensitivity and specificity for RIF, INH and MDR-TB were 89% and 100% | ||
| Maningi | Nepal | MTBC Isolates | 100 | Sensitivity for detecting RIF and INH and MDR were 100%. Specificity was 88%, 94% and 100% respectively, and >70% accuracy with culture | ||
| Seifert | USA, India, Moldova, and South Africa | Sputum | 1128 | Sensitivity and specificity for RIF were 97% and 98% and 94% and 100% for INH. 95% sensitivity and 99% specificity for detecting MDR-TB | ||
| Abanda | Cameroon | Sputum | 225 | Sensitivity for detecting RR, INH, and MDR-TB 98%, 92$, 94% respectively, and specificity over 99% with 96% accuracy with culture | ||
| Maeza | Ethiopia | Sputum | 274 | sensitivity for detecting RR, INH and MDR-TB 88, 92, 96% respectively, and specificity over 99% | ||
| Singh | India | Sputum | 572 | Sensitivity for RIF and INH were 100 and 99%, with 99% specificity | ||
| Tagliani | Europe (Germany, Italy and Sweden) | Detect MTBC and DST to SLIDs and FQs (either XDR or pre-XDR-TB) | MTBC Isolates | 228 | 86% and 90% Sensitivity and specificity for SLIDs, 83%−94$ and 100% for FQs, and 80$ and 82% for detecting MDR-TB, respectively | |
| Sputum | 231 | Sensitivity and specificity for SLIDs were 90% and 92%, and 93$ and 98% for FQs and for detecting MDR-TB was 82% and 98% respectively | ||||
| Gardee | South Africa | MTBC Isolates | 268 | 89% and 99% sensitivity and specificity for SLIDs and 100% and 99% for FQs, and 87% sensitivity for detecting XDR-TB, with 96% test accuracy for both target drugs | ||
| Yadav | India | Sputum and isolates | 431 | 93% sensitivity and 100% specificity for both SLIDs and XDR-TB, and 97% and 99% for FQs respectively | ||
| Hillemann | Germany | Detects MTBC and DST of RIF and INH | Isolates | 180 | 99% and 92% sensitivity for RIF and INH, respectively with 100% specificity compared to phenotypic DST | |
| de Vos | South Africa | Sputum | 448 | 100% sensitivity for both RIF and INH is 100% with 97% and 98% specificity for RIF and INH respectively, compared to genotypic DST | ||
| Pholwat | Bangladeshi, Thailand and Tanzania | Detects MTBC and DST for both first- and second-line drugs including PZA | MTBC Isolates | 230 | 87% and 96% accuracy against culture and Sanger sequencing respectively. Accuracy for detecting PZA 81% | |
| Foongladda | Bangladeshi, Thailand and Tanzania | MTBC Isolates | 212 | 75%−87% sensitivity and 91 %−98% specificity for SLD and≥91% for detecting MDR-TB with 87% accuracy for all drugs tested | ||
| Banu | Bangladeshi and Thailand | sputum and MTBC Isolates | 71 | 98% sensitivity and 92% specificity. Sensitivity in smear positive and negative was 89% and 33%, with 96%accuracy against Sanger sequencing | ||
| Walker | UK | Detection of MTBC up to species level and associated phenotypic drug resistance | SNP on entire MTBC genome or target region of a gene | MTBC isolate | 2099 | 92% sensitivity, 98% specificity, and 89% accuracy or detecting resistance |
| Quan | UK | MTBC isolates | 2039 | 94% sensitivity, 99% specificity, and 99% accuracy for detecting resistance | ||
| Chatterjee | India | MTBC isolates | 74 | 100% sensitivity, 94% specificity, and 97% accuracy for detecting MDR-TB | ||
| Shea | New York State, USA | MTBC isolates | 608 | Sensitivity for speciation, detecting and predicting resistance for all drugs was 99, 96% and 83% respectively. Specificity and accuracy were 99% | ||
| Nikolayevskyy | UK, Italy, Russia, Lithuania, Latvia | Detect viable MTBC DNA during treatment | PMA free DNA (viable DNA) | Serial sputa | 1937 | Sensitivity and specificity for detecting viable MTBC DNA was 98% and 71%−80% |
| Kayigire | South Africa | 151 | Sensitivity and specificity for detecting viable MTBC DNA was 95% and 63% compared to 95% and 42% in samples without PMA respectively | |||
| Honeyborne | Tanzania and Germany | Monitoring treatment response | MTBC 16S rRNA | Serial sputa | 148 | Biphasic decline of bacterial load in response to anti-TB treatment comparable o culture |
| Honeybome | Tanzania | 111 | Biphasic decline as observed longitudinally during anti-TB therapy at a mean of 0.99–0.81 log |
MTBC: Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex, MDR-TB: Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, PZA: Pyrazinamide, PMA: Propidium monoazide, DST: Drug susceptibility testing, SLIDs: Second-line injectable drug, rRNA: Ribosomal RNA, SNP: Single nucleotide polymorphism, RIF: Rifampicin, INH: Isoniazid, XDR-TB: Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, AMK: Amikacin, KAN: Kanamycin, RRDR: Rifampicin resistant determining region
Summary of molecular methods for either diagnosis or monitoring of drug resistant tuberculosis patients
| Variable & methods | Xpert® MTB/RIF | Xpert®- Ultra | Xpert®- XDR | Genotype MTBDRplus | Genotype MTBDRsl | FlouroType MTBDR | TAC-HRM | DNA Sequencers | Xpert-PMA | MBLA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maker | Cepheid, USA | Hain Life Science, Germany | Thermal fisher, USA | Several | Cepheid, USA | UK | ||||
| WHO status | Approved | Not approved | Approved | Not approved | ||||||
| Purpose | DR-TB diagnosis | monitoring therapy | ||||||||
| Target genes or biomarker | rpoB | rpoB, IS6110& IS 1081 | kalG, inhA, gyrA, gyrB, rrs | rpoB, katG & inhA | gyrA, gyrB, rrs & eis | rpoB,katG & inhA | rpoB, katG, inhA, gyrA, gyrB, rrs, pncA etc. | All or several target genes | DNA for viable MTBC | I6S rRNA for viable MTBC |
| Anli-TB drugs | RIF | RIF | INH, FQs, KAN, AMK | RIF & INH | FQs, KAN & AMK | RIF & INH | Several e.g., PZA | All or target | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| TAT (days) | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 5–10 | 1 | 2 |
| Specimen | Sputum & isolates | Sputum & isolates | Sputum & isolates | Sputum & isolates | Sputum & isolates | Sputum & isolates | Sputum & isolates | Isolates | sputum | sputum |
| Minimum Location | Peripheral laboratory | reginal and reference laboratory | reference laboratory | Peripheral laboratory | reginal laboratory | |||||
| Infra structurer | BSL2 with BSC | BSL2 with BSC | BSL2 with BSC | BSL2 with BSC | BSL2 with BSC | BSL2 with BSC | BSL2 with BSC | BSL3 | BSL2 with BSC | BSL3 |
| Personnel required | less skilled laboratorian | Skilled laboratorian with molecular biology knowledge | highly Skilled | less skilled | skilled | |||||
| Reagents storage | rT | 2–8 °C and freezer (either −20 or-80 °C) | rT | 2–8 °C and freezer | ||||||
| Reference | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
AMK: amikacin; BSC: biosafety cabinet; BSL: biosafety laboratory level; FQs: fluoroquinolones; INH: Isoniazid; KAN: Kanamycin; MBLA: Molecular bacterial load assay; PZA: Pyrazinamide; rT: room Temperature; TAT: turnaround time and TAC-HRM: TaqMan® array card-high resolution melts
Figure 1The processes and procedures used to retried relevant articles in electronic data. It also depicts the numbers of articles identified, screened for eligibility, and inclusion into the review