| Literature DB >> 30944200 |
Emily MacLean1,2, Giorgia Sulis1,2, Claudia M Denkinger2,3,4, James C Johnston2,5,6, Madhukar Pai1,2, Faiz Ahmad Khan7,2,8.
Abstract
Invasive collection methods are often required to obtain samples for the microbiological evaluation of children with presumptive pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB). Nucleic acid amplification testing of easier-to-collect stool samples could be a noninvasive method of diagnosing PTB. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of testing stool with the Xpert MTB/RIF assay ("stool Xpert") for childhood PTB. Four databases were searched for publications from January 2008 to June 2018. Studies assessing the diagnostic accuracy among children of stool Xpert compared to a microbiological reference standard of conventional specimens tested by mycobacterial culture or Xpert were eligible. Bivariate random-effects meta-analyses were performed to calculate pooled sensitivity and specificity of stool Xpert against the reference standard. From 1,589 citations, 9 studies (n = 1,681) were included. Median participant ages ranged from 1.3 to 10.6 years. Protocols for stool processing and testing varied substantially, with differences in reagents and methods of homogenization and filtering. Against the microbiological reference standard, the pooled sensitivity and specificity of stool Xpert were 67% (95% confidence interval [CI], 52 to 79%) and 99% (95% CI, 98 to 99%), respectively. Sensitivity was higher among children with HIV (79% [95% CI, 68 to 87%] versus 60% [95% CI, 44 to 74%] among HIV-uninfected children). Heterogeneity was high. Data were insufficient for subgroup analyses among children under the age of 5 years, the most relevant target population. Stool Xpert could be a noninvasive method of ruling in PTB in children, particularly those with HIV. However, studies focused on children under 5 years of age are needed, and generalizability of the evidence is limited by the lack of standardized stool preparation and testing protocols.Entities:
Keywords: Xpert MTB/RIF assay; childhood TB; pediatric infectious disease; pulmonary tuberculosis; stool
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30944200 PMCID: PMC6535592 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.02057-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948
FIG 1PRISMA study flow diagram.
Features of included studies and participants
| Study authors, yr (reference) | Location(s) | No. of eligible children | Age range, median (yr) (IQR) | No. of patients/total no. of patients (%) | Clinical features reported | EPTB status (no. of patients with EPTB [%]) | Reference standard | Sample type(s) used for reference standard | Total no. of specimens included in analysis | No. of microbiologically confirmed cases (%) | No. of clinically confirmed/unconfirmed cases (%) | No. of cases of clinically unlikely TB (%) | No. of contaminated cultures (%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | TB history | TB contact history | TST positive | HIV positive | |||||||||||||
| Banada et al., 2016 ( | South Africa | 40 | 0–15, NR | 21/38 (55) | NR | 16/38 (42) | NR | 16/38 (42) | Cough, EP symptoms, wt loss | PTB only | Xpert | IS, GA | 37 | 20 (54) | NR | ||
| Chipinduro et al., 2017 ( | Zimbabwe | 218 | 5–16, 10.6 (8–13) | 123/218 (56) | 17/218 (7.8) | 51/218 (23) | NR | 111/198 (56) | Cough, wt loss, night sweats, fever, appetite loss | PTB only | Culture | IS | 218 | 19 (8.7) | NR | ||
| CRS | 32 | 32 (100) | 0 (0) | NR | |||||||||||||
| Hasan et al., 2017 ( | Pakistan | 50 | 0–15, 6.8 (2–9) | 22/50 (44) | NR | 27/50 (54) | NR | 0/50 (0) | Cough, EP symptoms, wt loss | PTB only | Culture | Sputum, GA | 49 | 11 (22) | NR | ||
| CRS | 49 | 17 (35) | 32 (65) | NR | |||||||||||||
| LaCourse et al., 2018 ( | Kenya | 165 | 0–12, 2 (1.1–4.8) | 75/165 (45) | NR | 20/162 (12) | 7/151 (4.6) | 165/165 (100) | Cough, lethargy, fever, failure to thrive | PTB only | Culture | Sputum, GA | 147 | 11 (7.5) | NR | ||
| CRS | 165 | 85 (52) | 80 (48) | NR | |||||||||||||
| Marcy et al., 2016 ( | Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Cameroon, Vietnam | 272 | 0–13, 7.2 (4.1–7.2) | 132/272 (49) | 49/272 (18) | 58/272 (21) | 50/272 (18) | 272/272 (100) | Cough, wt loss, lethargy, fever, broad-spectrum Abx failure, CXR abnormality | PTB only | Culture | GA, IS, NS, string | 272 | 27 (10) | NR | ||
| CRS | 272 | 245 (90) | 27 (10) | NR | |||||||||||||
| Moussa et al., 2016 ( | Egypt | 115 | 1–16, NR | 45/115 (39) | NR | 29/115 (25) | 13/67 (19) | 0/115 (0) | Cough, wt loss, night sweats, fever, CXR abnormality | PTB only | Culture | Sputum, IS | 115 | 36 (31) | 0/115 (0) | ||
| Nicol et al., 2013 ( | South Africa | 115 | 1–15, 2.6 (1.6–4.8) | NR | 0/115 (0) | NR | NR | 17/115 (15) | Cough, wt loss, CXR abnormality | PTB only | Culture | IS | 115 | 17 (15) | NR | ||
| Orikiriza et al., 2018 ( | Uganda | 357 | 1–14, NR | 178/392 (45) | 8/392 (2.0) | 76/391 (19) | 99/383 (26) | 121/388 (31) | Cough, wt loss, night sweats, lethargy, fever | PTB only | Culture | Sputum, IS | 349 | 9 (2.6) | 6/357 (1.7) | ||
| Walters et al., 2017 ( | South Africa | 379 | 0–13, 1.3 (0.8–2.4) | 184/379 (49) | 27/379 (7.1) | 214/379 (56) | 82/294 (28) | 51/379 (13) | Cough, wt loss, fever | Mix of EPTB and PTB (35/379 [9.2]) | Culture | GA, IS, NA, string | 379 | 72 (19) | NR | ||
| CRS | 351 | 242 (69) | 109 (31) | NR | |||||||||||||
Implied only pulmonary TB cases based on collection of respiratory samples only.
Definitions of each clinical reference standard are given in Table S1 in the supplemental material.
Lowenstein-Jensen solid culture.
Bactec MGIT liquid culture.
Both Lowenstein-Jensen solid cultures and MGIT liquid culture.
MGIT liquid culture, with positive samples then being subcultured on Lowenstein-Jensen medium for 3 additional weeks.
Some studies included separate comparisons of stool Xpert for microbiological and clinical reference standards. Abbreviations: Abx, antibiotics; CRS, clinical reference standard; CXR, chest X ray; EP, extrapulmonary; EPTB, extrapulmonary TB; GA, gastric aspirate; IQR, interquartile range; IS, induced sputum; NA, nasopharyngeal aspirate; NR, not reported; TST, tuberculin skin test.
Details of stool sample storage and processing for each of the included studies
| Study authors, yr (reference) | No. of samples collected, mass (g) | Stool sample collection timing | Immediate use | Storage method | Stool mass used for Xpert (g) | First reagent(s) added to stool | Homogenization method(s) | Duration of specimen settling | Additional reagent(s) and or filtering/processing procedure(s) | Pellet processing procedure | Final sample loaded into cartridge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Banada et al., 2016 ( | 1, 5 | NR | No | 4°C for 7 days | 0.6 | 2 ml processing buffer (AL buffer, 10% povidone), 2 ml Xpert buffer | Vortexing with glass beads | 30 min at RT | All syringe filtered | No pellet | 2 ml added to cartridge |
| Chipinduro et al., 2017 ( | 1, 5 | Within 24 h of respiratory sample collection | No | 4°C for max of 2 days | 0.15, using sterile loop | 2.4 ml PBS | Vortexing | 20 min at RT | 1 ml supernatant taken, centrifuged at 3,200 rpm for 15 min | Pellet resuspended in 1 ml PBS | Diluted 2:1 in buffer, added to cartridge |
| Hasan et al., 2017 ( | 1, NR | Within 24 h of respiratory sample collection | No | 2–8°C (days NR), taken to tertiary hospital, stored at −80°C | 0.15 | 2.4 ml PBS | Vortexing | 20 min at RT | 1 ml supernatant taken, centrifuged at 3,500 rpm for 15 min | Pellet resuspended in 1 ml PBS | Diluted 2:1 in buffer, added to cartridge |
| LaCourse et al., 2018 ( | 1, 2–15 | Within 24 h of respiratory sample collection | Yes | NA | NR | Equal vol of PBS | Manual homogenization | 12 to 48 h at 2–5°C | All filtered through fine filter, vortexed; added to equal vol of NaOH-NALC; PBS (concn NR) added to 40 ml and centrifuged twice | Pellet resuspended in 1.4 ml PBS by vortexing | Diluted 2:1 in buffer, added to cartridge |
| Marcy et al., 2016 ( | NR, 0.5 | NR | Both | Some frozen (temp and days NR) | 0.5 | 10 ml Sheather’s solution (28% sucrose) | Manual homogenization, vortexing for 30 s | NR | All filtered through funnel gauze; centrifuged at 100 × | No pellet | 0.5 ml supernatant, 1.8 ml buffer added to cartridge; mixture allowed to sit for 15 min at RT; shaken; run |
| Moussa et al., 2016 ( | 2, 2 | NR | Yes | NA | 2 | 10 ml distilled H2O | Vortexing | NR | Supernatant (concn NR) taken, centrifuged at 4,000 rpm for 20 min | Pellet decontaminated in 10 ml 3% NALC-NaOH for 15 min at RT; added to 40 ml PBS; centrifuged for 20 min; pellet resuspended in 1 ml PBS | Diluted 2:1 in buffer, added to cartridge |
| Nicol et al., 2013 ( | 1, NR | At baseline | No | −80°C within 2 h for max of 6 mo | 0.15 using FLOQ swabs | 2.4 ml PBS | Vortexing | 20 min at RT | 1 ml supernatant taken, centrifuged at 3,200 rpm for 15 min | Pellet resuspended in 1 ml PBS | Diluted 2:1 in buffer, added to cartridge |
| Orikiriza et al., 2018 ( | 1, NR | NR | Yes | NA | NR | Saline solution | Vortexing | 5 min at RT | 5 ml mixture taken, added to NaOH-NALC, vortexed, with standing for 20 min; PBS added to 50 ml and centrifuged at 3,000 × | Pellet decontaminated with NaOH-NALC method, respun; pellet resuspended in 1.5 ml unspecified buffer | 0.5 ml added to cartridge |
| Walters et al., 2017 ( | 1, 0.3–5 | Within 7 days of respiratory sample collection | Both | 2–8°C for max of 3 days if collected at home | <5 | 20 ml PBS | Vortexing | None | 5 ml mixture taken, added to NALC-NaOH | Concentration | Diluted 2:1 in buffer, added to cartridge |
| 1, 0.3–5 | Within 7 days of respiratory sample collection | Both | 2–8°C for max of 3 days if collected at home | 1–4 | 10 ml PBS | Vortexing | None | All centrifuged at 3,000 × | Pellet resuspended in 10 ml by vortexing for 20 s; centrifuged at 2,000 × | 1 ml supernatant added to cartridge |
Abbreviations: max, maximum; NA, not applicable; NR, not reported; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; RT, room temperature; NALC-NaOH, N-acetyl-l-cysteine–sodium hydroxide.
FIG 2QUADAS-2 risk of bias and applicability concerns graph. The review authors’ judgements about each domain are presented as percentages across the 9 included studies.
FIG 3(A) Forest plots of stool Xpert’s diagnostic performance compared to a microbiological reference standard of culture or Xpert positivity on respiratory samples (14–22). Two studies (18, 20) presented results from “intention-to-treat” (ITT) analyses, where any child who produced any sample was included, as well as “per-protocol” analyses, where only children who produced all requested samples were included. In these instances, we meta-analyzed the ITT results to avoid selection bias. (B) Forest plots of stool Xpert’s diagnostic performance compared to a clinical reference standard of “likely/possible TB” or “unlikely TB.” (C) Forest plots of diagnostic performance of stool Xpert in children with HIV compared to a microbiological reference standard. (D) Forest plots of diagnostic performance of stool Xpert in HIV-negative children compared to a microbiological reference standard.
Results of meta-analyses for estimated stool Xpert sensitivity and specificity
| Comparison | Main results | Results of sensitivity analysis excluding the study that did not use culture as reference standard | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of studies included (no. of children included) | Pooled sensitivity (%) (95% CI); | Pooled specificity (%) (95% CI); | No. of studies included (no. of children included) | Pooled sensitivity (%) (95% CI); | Pooled specificity (%) (95% CI); | |
| Stool Xpert against microbiological reference standard | 9 | 67 (52–79); 83 (72–93) | 99 (98–99); 62 (35–90) | 8 | 64 (49–76); 81 (69–93) | 99 (98–100); 61 (31–91) |
| Stool Xpert against clinical reference standard | 5 | 22 (9.0–44); 95 (92–98) | 100 (66–100); 78 (59–97) | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Stool Xpert against microbiological reference standard for children with HIV | 5 | 79 (68–87); 0 (0–100) | 99 (94–100); 35 (0–99) | 5 | 80 (68–88); 0 (0–100) | 99 (94–100); 51 (0–100) |
| Stool Xpert against microbiological reference standard for HIV-negative children | 7 | 61 (40–79); 39 (0–100) | 99 (98–100); 56 (13–100) | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable |
The I2 statistic was used to quantify the effect of between-study heterogeneity.
From references 14–22.
From references 16–20.
From references 15, 17, 18, 21, and 22.
From references 14–17, 19, 20, and 22.
From references 14 and 16–22.
From references 17, 18, 21, and 22.