Literature DB >> 35239898

Clinical Impact of the Line Probe Assay and Xpert® MTB/RIF Assay in the Presumptive Diagnosis of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis in Brazil: A Pragmatic Clinical Trial.

Afranio Kritski1, Maria Martha Oliveira1, Isabela Neves de Almeida2, Daniela Ramalho1, Monica Kramer de Noronha Andrade1,3, Monica Carvalho3, Pryscila Fernandes Campino Miranda1, Margareth Pretti Dalcolmo3, Jose Ueleres Braga4, Tania Brígido5, Eliene Mesquita6, Claudia Dias7, Aglae Gambirasio8, Joao Baptista Souza Filho9, Anne Detjen10, Patrick Peter John Phillips11,12, Ivor Langley13, Paula Fujiwara12, Stephen Bertel Squire13.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Rapid molecular methods such as the line probe assay (LPA) and Xpert® MTB/RIF assay (Xpert) have been recommended by the World Health Organization for drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) diagnosis. We conducted an interventional trial in DR-TB reference centers in Brazil to evaluate the impact of the use of LPA and Xpert.
METHODS: Patients with DR-TB were eligible if their drug susceptibility testing results were available to the treating physician at the time of consultation. The standard reference MGITTM 960 was compared with Xpert (arm 1) and LPA (arm 2). Effectiveness was considered as the start of the appropriate TB regimen that matched drug susceptibility testing (DST) and the proportions of culture conversion and favorable treatment outcomes after 6 months.
RESULTS: A higher rate of empirical treatment was observed with MGIT alone than with the Xpert assay (97.0% vs. 45.0%) and LPA (98.2% vs. 67.5%). Patients started appropriate TB treatment more quickly than those in the MGIT group (median 15.0 vs. 40.5 days; p<0.01) in arm 1. Compared to the MGIT group, culture conversion after 6 months was higher for Xpert in arm 1 (90.9% vs. 79.3%, p=0.39) and LPA in arm 2 (80.0% vs. 83.0%, p=0.81).
CONCLUSIONS: In the Xpert arm, there was a significant reduction in days to the start of appropriate anti-TB treatment and a trend towards greater culture conversion in the sixth month.

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35239898      PMCID: PMC8932318          DOI: 10.1590/0037-8682-0191-2021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Soc Bras Med Trop        ISSN: 0037-8682            Impact factor:   1.581


INTRODUCTION

Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by a single infectious agent and is one of the top 10 fatal diseases worldwide. In 2019, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported an estimated 1.4 million deaths due to TB. Drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) continues to be a public health crisis. According to the 2019 worldwide estimate, approximately 500,000 people developed TB with rifampicin (RIF) resistance (RR) and drug resistance (DR) to the most effective first-line drug, and, of them, 78% had multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) . There was some global progress in testing, detection, and treatment of MDR-TB/RR-TB in 2019: 61% of people with bacteriologically confirmed TB were tested. Despite this, the importance of rapid detection of DR-TB and the adoption of correct treatment has been emphasized . Envisaging a more efficient response to the global coinfection emergence of TB in HIV and MDR-TB cases, the WHO recommended rapid drug susceptibility testing (DST) using phenotypic methods in 2007 and molecular techniques such as the line probe assay (LPA) using the Genotype® MTBDRplus assay (Hain Lifescience, Nehren, Germany) in 2008 and Xpert® MTB/RIF assay (Cepheid©, Sunnyvale, USA) in 2010 , . Recently, to provide more useful data for the decision-making of TB managers, it was recommended that the incorporation of new TB diagnostic tests under routine conditions should also be adapted by the healthcare process of local healthcare systems . In 2015, the World Health Assembly endorsed the End TB Strategy proposed by the WHO, which established ambitious targets to be met by 2035. Among them, the diagnosis of TB and DR/MDR-TB was prioritized, with a focus on the systematic screening of contacts and risk groups and recommending that governments should provide universal access to DST . The adoption of such strategies may help TB programs cope with the current clinical management demands, as well as the implementation of new anti-TB regimens. Regarding the incorporation of new tests for the diagnosis of DR/MDR-TB, limited studies have analyzed the clinical impact of molecular techniques under field conditions - . Among studies that have analyzed the use of LPA, a reduction in the time interval between triage and laboratory confirmation of LPA , , the adoption of appropriate anti-TB treatment - , and a higher culture conversion rate at the sixth or eighth month of clinical follow-up , , were observed; however, cases of successful anti-TB treatment were described in only one study . Moreover, in a study evaluating the use of Xpert in presumed DR-TB cases , a reduction in the time between triage and the adoption of appropriate treatment was reported, but no significant difference was observed in the cure rates between patients allocated to the Xpert group and those in the control group. Despite the continuing rollout of these new tests in high-burden countries, this is the first study to conduct a pragmatic, randomized, empirical trial involving DR-TB patients to evaluate whether molecular tests would indeed improve patient-important outcomes and endpoints such as reductions in empirical treatment and community transmission , . In Brazil, more effective TB control involves overcoming serious obstacles, including the low detection rate of DR-TB, which usually results in high morbidity and mortality, as DST is performed in only 20% of the presumed DR/MDR-TB patients . Although the BactecTM MGITTM 960 system (BD Diagnostic Systems, Sparks, MD, USA) has been commercialized in Brazil, it has not been incorporated into the public healthcare system for the diagnosis of DR/MDR-TB. In 2014, Xpert was incorporated into public health and was performed for presumed TB patients, but there is no information related to the use of these new diagnostic technologies in public TB reference centers that manage DR/MDR-TB patients. Recently, in 2021, the LPA was incorporated into the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS), different from the reality of the period in which this study was conducted . To assist in the evaluation of the impact of incorporating molecular tests in the Brazilian Unified Health System, the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union), through the TREAT TB initiative, the Brazilian Network of Tuberculosis Research , and the Academic Tuberculosis Program of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, carried out a pragmatic, multicenter, prospective one-way crossover interventional trial among presumed DR-TB cases evaluated in state reference centers, called PROVE IT (registration no. RBR-4rprbd). This study aimed to compare the impact of adopting the MGIT, LPA, and Xpert tests on the diagnosis of presumed DR-TB patients relative to treatment outcomes.

METHODS

Study design

This study was a one-way crossover randomized trial in which each center constituted a unit of randomization and was allocated to one of two arms: arm 1, Xpert with MGIT in the first period, MGIT alone in the second period, MGIT alone in the first period, and Xpert with MGIT in the second period; and arm 2, either LPA with MGIT in the first period and MGIT alone in the second period or MGIT alone in the first period and LPA with MGIT in the second period. Owing to logistic challenges, only five sites were available, and while the randomization of the five sites proceeded as planned, this number was too small for a cluster randomized trial; therefore, the study was performed as a pragmatic, multicenter, prospective interventional trial instead. After randomization of the selected DR-TB reference centers, outpatients and hospitalized patients were tested using either the LPA, Xpert, or MGIT test.

Setting and study period

A multicenter, pragmatic, prospective one-way crossover interventional trial was conducted at five DR-TB reference centers in four provinces in Brazil from October 2011 to May 2013. It involved inpatients and outpatients from Hospital Sanatorio Partenon, Secretaria Estadual de Saúde, Rio Grande do Sul, Hospital Messejana, Secretaria Estadual do Ceará, Instituto Estadual Ary Parreiras, and Secretaria Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, as well as outpatients from Instituto Clemente Ferreira, Secretaria Estadual de São Paulo, Centro de Referência Hélio Fraga, and Fundação Oswaldo Cruz in Rio de Janeiro. The protocol was approved by the National Research Ethics Committee (CONEP no. 520/2011; registration no. 16571; process no. 25000.115789/2011-94) on September 29, 2011, and by the Ethics Advisory Group of the Union (no. 11/11) on May 10, 2011. The protocol was approved by the appropriate local institutional review board and ethics committee. Protocol registration was delayed due to operational issues in the Brazilian Clinical Trials Network (registration no. RBR-4rprbd).

Participants

Eligible participants were aged 18 years or older and had experienced a cough for 3 weeks or more. Per national guidelines at the time the study was performed , those with a history of DST and bacteriological confirmation of TB besides at least one of the following conditions were defined as having presumed DR/MDR-TB: (a) suspicion of retreatment, failure, or treatment default from previous anti-TB treatment and (b) HIV seropositivity or close contact with smear-positive (SSm+) MDR-TB patients, without previous anti-TB treatment. Subjects were excluded if they had (a) confirmed drug-sensitive TB, (b) refused to sign the informed consent form, or (c) harbored atypical mycobacteria.

Test allocation by site

The randomization unit consisted of eligible DR-TB reference centers. These health units were randomly assigned to use the Xpert or MGIT assay during the first and second periods (arm 1) or to use the LPA or MGIT assay during the first and second periods (arm 2), using computer-generated allocation lists. Three sites (Hospital Sanatorio Partenon, Instituto Estadual Ary Parreiras, and Centro Referência Hélio Fraga) were allocated to arm 2, and two sites (Hospital Messejana and Instituto Clemente Ferreira) were allocated to arm 1. In period 1, patients were enrolled from October 2011 to July 2012, and in period 2, enrollment started in August 2012 and ended in May 2013. All patients were followed up for 6 months. During the first period, LPAs and MGIT assays were performed at the Instituto Estadual Ary Parreiras and Centro Referência Hélio Fraga, and Xpert and MGIT assays were performed at the Instituto Clemente Ferreira. In period 2, LPA and MGIT assays were performed at Hospital Parthenon, and Xpert assays with MGIT assays were performed at Hospital Messejana. When the trial was first designed, more sites were planned to improve the feasibility of the crossover cluster randomized clinical trial (RCT). As this study was ultimately conducted with a smaller number of sites, it was not feasible to analyze the data with the unit of randomization as the health center (with only five centers); therefore, data were not analyzed as a cluster RCT but as a prospective one-way crossover interventional trial. Individuals assessing the outcomes were blinded to the interventions.

Data collection

An impact assessment framework was used to define the key data that would be collected for this study . The study did not modify any routinely administered procedures. The collected clinical data were extracted monthly from patient registers and clinical records using a study form. Patient registers had the following information about all patients included in this study: relative’s name, age, sex, address, phone number, type of patient (previous treatment classification), and date of diagnosis. Clinical and sociodemographic information was collected by healthcare workers on-site. History of tobacco smoking and alcohol use was ascertained at entry via a standardized staff-administered questionnaire (current smoker/past smoker/never smoker). The clinical samples collected in the health units were sent to a participating laboratory using local standard practice and routine; that is, samples were sent daily or twice a week. Laboratories issued results according to routine procedures. Data were collected at each site for 15 months, during each intervention phase (9 months), and at follow-up (6 months). A standardized form was used to collect data regarding time from (1) triage (screening visit) to clinical consultation, (2) sputum collection to the release of the DST result by the laboratory, and (3) the DST results seen by the physician and adoption of appropriate TB treatment (initiation or change in the anti-TB regimen after DST results). DR-TB and MDR-TB patients received TB treatment according to the National TB Guidelines. For the first-line regimen, RIF, isoniazid (INH), ethambutol (EMB), and pyrazinamide were administered for the first 2 months, followed by RIF and INH for 4 months. For the second-line regimen, streptomycin (SM), amikacin, EMB, levofloxacin, pyrazinamide, and terizidone were administered for the first 6 months, followed by EMB, levofloxacin, and terizidone for 12 months .

Laboratory procedures

The sites were randomized and assigned one diagnostic approach for 9 months and then switched to other diagnostic approaches. All patients were assessed using the same diagnostic approach for a particular period. According to site randomization, participants in arm 1 were assigned to have their samples analyzed by the MGIT assay alone during a 9-month period or by Xpert assays with MGIT assays in another period. For arm 2, similar procedures were followed: patients were assigned to have their samples analyzed by MGIT assays alone or by LPA with MGIT assays. All clinical samples from the five DR-TB reference centers were sent to the local laboratories for culture, DST for first-line drugs (RIF, INH, EMB, and SM), and identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (Mtb complex). Tests were performed according to the local TB laboratory routine, and the techniques are fully described elsewhere . The smears were stained using the Ziehl-Neelsen stain and scored according to international guidelines. Patients were classified as having SSm+ TB if any smear revealed the presence of acid-fast bacilli over 100 fields (1,000× for light microscopy and 400× for fluorescence microscopy) . As the MGIT assay was considered the reference standard, all subjects’ samples were evaluated through this method, including those allocated to the LPA or Xpert assay arms. A concentrated smear was prepared and examined, followed by culture, including mycobacterial growth indicator tubes with PANTA and OADC. Positive cultures were defined based on the detection of Mtb complexes using p-nitrobenzoic acid testing. For LPA, DNA was extracted from a portion of the decontaminated sediment, followed by multiplex polymerase chain reaction amplification and reverse hybridization using LPA, according to the manufacturer’s instructions . A four-module Xpert machine, desktop computer, and uninterrupted power supply were installed at each health unit together with a thermometer and a hygrometer . No additional equipment or infrastructure was installed. Xpert assays were performed directly using sputum samples. MGIT was performed at each participant’s reference health center.

Case definition

DR-TB patients were defined as those harboring Mtb isolates resistant to one or more drugs, and MDR-TB patients were defined as those harboring Mtb isolates resistant to RIF and INH, according to MGIT results. The MGIT results were compared with the LPA and Xpert results. Empirical treatment was defined when, at triage, the physicians started TB treatment before receiving the DST results. Clinical and radiological improvements were assessed by the attending physicians at each site. All DR/MDR-TB patients were followed up as routinely planned according to the local algorithm. To evaluate the additional endpoints, at the second and sixth months, the local study research team, using the standardized form, checked the clinical, radiological, and laboratory data and for culture tests of sputum analysis when available. Clinical and radiological improvement and/or culture conversion at the sixth month were considered favorable TB treatment responses; failure, death from any cause, and default were considered unfavorable results. Those who were transferred were excluded from the analysis of the TB treatment outcomes.

Endpoints

The primary endpoint was defined as the time to initiation of an appropriate TB regimen, calculated as the time interval from triage of presumed DR-TB subjects to a TB regimen that “matched” the results of the reference standard DST. The secondary endpoint was the proportion of presumptive TB treatment initiated at triage, culture conversion, and TB treatment outcome at the sixth month after trial enrollment.

Sample size

For sample size calculation for the secondary endpoint, estimates of the proportion of culture conversions at the sixth month were used. Assuming a one-sided alpha of 5%, a type II error of 20% (80% power), and 40% culture negativity on MGIT assays (using data gathered from the National MDR-TB System during 2006-2007) , a total of 69 patients would be required to exhibit a relative increase of 40% in LPA or Xpert (70% culture negativity on LPA or Xpert). Assuming a lack of culture results for 10% of patients at the sixth month (lost to follow-up), a total of 76 patients would be required in both periods for each comparison: LPA vs. MGIT assay and Xpert assay vs. MGIT assay. Due to the small number of clusters, the study was not adequately powered for a cluster RCT, but it had enough power when all data were analyzed together.

Statistical analysis

Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of the included and excluded subjects were compared. Exploratory analysis was carried out through dichotomous outcomes based on proportion calculation for groups and continuous outcomes. Means, standard deviations, and median values were calculated. The sample distribution of time periods from triage to DST results, physician decision making, initiation of appropriate TB treatment, culture conversion at the second and sixth months, and favorable outcomes were compared between the two arms: MGIT assay vs. LPA and MGIT assay vs. Xpert assay. Fisher’s exact test with mid-p correction was used for comparisons between proportions, and the Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare differences in morbidity. All statistical analyses were performed using IBM SPSS® software (version 20).

RESULTS

During the study period, 808 eligible presumed DR-TB patients with available DST results were enrolled. Among them, 647 (78.6%) were excluded: 635 with drug-sensitive TB and 12 who refused to participate (Figure 1).
FIGURE 1:

Flow diagram of presumed DR-TB with DST conducted at five reference centers, Brazil.

Among the 161 patients included in the trial, 64 were allocated to arm 1 (MGIT, 44 vs. Xpert, 20) and 97 to arm 2 (MGIT, 57 vs. LPA, 40). Among those allocated to arm 1, in Hospital Messejana and Instituto Clemente Ferreira, 44 and 20 patients, respectively, were presumed to have DR-TB (Figure 1). Among those allocated to arm 2, there were 20, 49, and 28 presumed DR-TB patients from Instituto Ary Parreiras, Centro de Referência Hélio Fraga, and Hospital Sanatorio Partenon, respectively (Table 1).
TABLE 1:

Distribution of DR-TB cases according to the intervention arm and study site.

Presumed DR-TBDR-TB casesMGITXpertLPA
cases with DST NN (%)N (%)N (%)N (%)
Hospital de Messejana12844 (34.4)28 (63.6)16 (80%)
Instituto Clemente Ferreira8420 (23.8)16 (36.4)4 (20%)
Instituto Estadual do Tórax Ary Parreiras 7720 (25.9)10 (17.5) 10 (25.0)
Centro de Referência Hélio Fraga20549 (23.9)38 (66.7) 11 (27.5)
Hospital Sanatorio Partenon14128 (19.8)9 (15.8) 19 (47.5)
Total 808 161 (19.9)

Legend: DR-TB: drug-resistant tuberculosis; DST: drug susceptibility testing; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert® MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay.

Legend: DR-TB: drug-resistant tuberculosis; DST: drug susceptibility testing; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert® MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay. Among the 161 included DR-TB cases, 108 (67.1%) were male, 89 (55.3%) were aged 26-45 years, 46 (28.6%) were alcoholics, 62 (38.5%) were current tobacco smokers, and 43 (26.7%) and 24 (14.9%) had been admitted to the hospital or sent to prison in the past 2 years, respectively. HIV was diagnosed in 22 (16.5%) of 133 tested patients, and contact with DR-TB cases was reported in 59 (36.6%) cases. A total of 119 patients (73.9%) had a history of TB; among them, 29 (24.3%) had received more than three treatments. Cavities on chest radiographs were observed in 134 patients (83.3%). Smear negativity/culture positivity was identified in 24 cases (15%). These results are displayed in Table 2 , Table 3 , and Table 4, respectively.
TABLE 2:

Sociodemographic characteristics among presumed DR-TB cases according to the intervention arm.

Intervention Arm
Arm 1 Arm 2
MGITXpert MGITLPA
VariableN (%)N (%)OR* (95% CI)P-valueN (%)N (%)OR* (95% CI)P-value
Sex
Male27 (61.4)14 (70.0)0.68 (0.2-2.11)p=0.5036 (63.2)31 (77.5)0.49 (0.19-1.24)p=0.13
Female17 (38.6)6 (30.0)1.0 21 (36.8)9 (22.5)1.0
Age (years)
<257 (15.9)4 (20.0)1.0 3 (5.3)6 (15.0)1.0
26-4522 (50.0)13 (65.0)0.96 (0.23-3.94)p=0.9636 (63.2)18 (45.0)4.00 (0.89-17.87)p=0.12
>4515 (34.1)3 (15.0)2.85 (0.48-16.3)p=0.2718 (31.6)16 (40.0)2.25 (0.48-10.50)p=0.50
Skin color
White22 (50.0)5 (25.0)0.33 (0.10-1.07)p=0.0645 (78.9)23 (57.5)2.77 (1.13-6.77)p=0.02
Non-white22 (50.0)15 (75.0)1.0 12 (21.1)17 (42.5)1.0
Smoking
Current18 (40.9)5 (25.0)1.0 23 (40.4)16 (40.0)1.0
Ex-smoker18 (40.9)7 (35.0)0.71 (0.19-2.67)p=0.6113 (22.8)14 (35.0)1.54 (0.57-4.15)p=0.39
Never8 (18.2)8 (40.0)0.27 (0.06-1.12)p=0.0621 (36.8)10 (25.0)0.68 (0.25-1.83)p=0.45
Alcoholism (CAGE)
Yes5 (11.4)2 (10.0)1.15 (0.20-6.52) 8 (14.0)10 (25.0)0.49 (0.17-1.37)p=0.17
No39 (88.6)18 (80.0)1.0p=1.0049 (86.0)30 (75.0)1.0
Hospitalization in the last 2 years
Yes6 (13.6)6 (30.0)0.36 (0.10-1.33) 15 (26.3)16 (40.0)0.53 (0.23-1.27)p=0.15
No38 (86.4)14 (70.0)1.0p=0.1642 (73.7)24 (60.0)1.0
Prison in the last 2 years
Yes7 (15.9)1 (5.0)3.59 (0.41-31.9)p=0.419 (15.8)7 (17.9)0.85 (0.29-2.53)p=0.78
No37 (84.1)19 (95.0)1.0 48 (84.2)32 (82.1)1.0
Not reported 1
Shelters in the last 2 years
Yes0 (0.0)0 (0.0)--5 (8.9)2 (5.0)1.86 (0.34-10.1)p=0.69
No43 (100.0)20 (100.0) 51 (91.1)38 (95.0)1.0
Not reported1- 1

Legend: OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert® MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay.

TABLE 3:

Clinical, laboratory, and radiological characteristics among presumed DR-TB at triage according to the intervention arm.

Intervention Arm
Arm 1 Arm 2
MGITXpert MGITLPA
VariableN (%)N (%)OR* (95% CI)P-valueN (%)N (%)OR* (95% CI)P-value
Contact with Pulmonary TB
Yes18 (52.9)7 (50.0)1.12 (0.32-3.90) 18 (40.0)16 (59.3)0.45 (0.17-1.21)p=0.11
No16 (47.1)7 (50.0)1.0p=1.0027 (60.0)11 (40.7)1.0
Not reported106- 1213
Comorbidities
Yes24 (57.1)11 (57.9)0.97 (0.32-2.90)p=0.9527 (47.4)29 (72.5)0.34 (0.14-0.81)p=0.01
No18 (42.9)8 (42.1)1.0 30 (52.6)11 (27.5)1.0
Not reported21
TB in the past
Yes32 (74.4)15 (83.3)0.58 (0.14-2.39)p=0.5244 (78.6)28 (70.0)1.57 (0.62-3.98)p=0.33
No11 (25.6)3 (16.7)1.0 12 (21.4)12 (30.0)1.0
Not reported12- 1
Number of previousTB treatments
≥311 (34.4)4 (26.7)1-44 (0.37-5.59)p=0.747 (15.9)7 (25.0)0.56 (0.17-1.84)p=0.34
<321 (65.6)11 (73.3)1-0 37 (84.1)21 (75.0)1.0
Not applicable125
Treatment outcome in the last TB episode
Cure8 (25.8)2 (13.3)0.44 (0.08-2.40)p=0.5715 (33.3)9 (32.1)0.94 (0.34-2.59)p=0.91
Failure23 (74.2)13 (86.7)1.0 30 (66.7)19 (67.9)1.0
Not applicable15
Not reported120
Weight loss
Yes21 (47.7)15 (75.0)4.10 (1.17-14.36)p=0.0242 (73.7)35 (87.5)2.33 (0.76-7.11)p=0.12
No23 (52.3)4 (25.0)1.0 14 (24.6)5 (12.5)1.0
Not reported 1 1-
Expectorated cough
Yes40 (90.9)18 (90.0)1.11 (0.18-6.63) 48 (84.2)34 (85.0)0.94 (0.30-2.89)p=0.91
No4 (9.1)2 (20.0)1.0p=1.009 (15.8)6 (15.0)1.0
Not reported - 00
Hemoptysis
Yes10 (22.7)6 (30.0)0.68 (0.20-2.25)p=0.5419 (33.3)14 (35.0)0.92 (0.39-2.17)p=0.86
No34 (77.3)14 (70.0)1.0 38 (66.7)26 (65.0)1.0
Not reported -
Sweating
Yes23 (54.7)14 (70.0)1.92 (0.62-5.98)p=0.2539 (68.4)29 (72.5)1.0
No19 (45.3)6 (30.0)1.0 18 (31.6)9 (22.5)1.48 (0.58-3.78)p=0.40
Not reported20 -2 (5.0)-p=0.38
Fever
Yes26 (60.4)15 (75.0)1.92 (0.62-5.98)p=0.2638 (66.7)27 (67.5)1.0
No17 (39.6)5 (25.0)1.0 18 (31.6)12 (30.0)1.06 (0.44-2.85)p=0.88
Not reported1 1 (1.8)1 (2.5)0.71 (0.04-11.8)p=1.00
Appetite loss
Yes25 (58.1)15 (75.0)2.16 (0.66-7.02)p=0.1942 (73.7)27 (67.5)1.34 (0.55-3.27)p=0.50
No18 (41.9)5 (25.0)1.0 15 (26.3)13 (32.5)1.0
Not reported1 -
Dyspnea
Yes14 (42.4)3 (15.0)0.36 (0.09-1.45)p=0.1444 (77.2)21 (52.5)0.34 (0.14-0.83)p=0.01
No29 (57.6)17 (85.0)1.0 13 (22.8)18 (45.0)1.0p=0.66
Not reported1- -1 (2.5)-
Anti-HIV testing performed?
Yes34 (82.9)16 (84.2)0.91 (0.20-3.99)p=1.0053 (94.6)30 (75.0)5.8 (1.5-23.07)p=0.006
No7 (17.1)3 (15.8)1.0 3 (5.4)10 (25.0)1.0
Not reported31 1
HIV testing result
Positive3 (9.1)3 (18.8)0.43 (0.07-2.43)p=0.3710 (18.9)6 (20.7)0.89 (0.28-2.76)p=0.84
Negative30 (90.0)13 (81.3)1.0 43 (81.1)23 (79.3)1.0
Not reported114- 41
Smearmicroscopy
Positive37 (84.1)18 (90.0)0.58 (0.11-3.11)p=0.7047 (83.9)35 (87.5)0.74 (0.23-2.42)p=0.62
Negative7 (15.9)2 (20.0)1.0 9 (16.1)5 (12.5)1.0
Not reported 1
Cavity
Yes33 (75.0)19 (95.0)0.15 (0.01-1.32) 46 (80.7)36 (90.0)0.46 (0.13-1.58)p=0.21
No11 (25.0)1 (5.0)1.0p=0.0811 (19.3)4 (10.0)1.0
Chest X-ray images
Typical40 (90.9)19 (95.0)0.52 (0.05-5.03)p=1.0049 (86.0)38 (95.0)2.38 (0.45-12.49)p=0.50
Compatible4 (9.1)1 (5.0)1.0 6 (10.5)2 (5.0)1.0
Atypical00- 2 (3.5)0-p=0.63

Legend: OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert®MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay.

TABLE 4:

Distribution of time from triage to clinical outcomes according to study arm.

Arm 1 Arm 2
Time (days) from triage toMGITXpertP-valueMGITLPAP-value
N (IQR)N (IQR) N (IQR)N (IQR)
Sputum collection0 (0-0)0 (0-0.75)0.710 (0-0)0 (0-1.00)0.87
DST results release32.5 (27.2-47.0)2.2 (0-2.5)<0.00134.0 (22-62.0)9.0 (7-15.0)<0.001
DST results received by the physician55.5 (38.2-103.5)7.0 (3-13.3)<0.00140.2 (27.2-65.7)30.0 (9-33.2)<0.001
Changing treatment47 (35-87.7)30.0 (6.7-42.7)0.00569.0 (46-84.0)61.0 (34-121.0)0.99
Treatment that matches with standard reference DST40.5 (28.7-76.7)15.0 (4.5-38.5)0.0154.0 (17-80.5)61.4 (19.7-104.7)0.78

Legend: IQR: interquartile range; DST: drug susceptibility testing; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert® MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay.

Legend: OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert® MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay. Legend: OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert®MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay. Legend: IQR: interquartile range; DST: drug susceptibility testing; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert® MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay. In comparison to MGIT, among the 20 patients evaluated by Xpert, resistance to RIF was identified in 15 samples and confirmed in 13 (11 MDR-TB and 2 RR), and five samples were false sensitive to RIF. Additionally, in comparison to MGIT, among 40 patients evaluated by LPA, resistance to RIF was identified in 27 samples and confirmed in 23; sensitivity to RIF was identified in 8 and confirmed in 1. Resistance to INH was identified in 37 samples and confirmed in 35 patients (34 MDR). In summary, false-positive results for RIF resistance were observed in 13% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 6.3-45.9) of patients in the Xpert arm and 14.8% (95% CI: 5.3-33.1) of patients in the LPA arm; when comparing sociodemographic, clinical, laboratory, and radiological characteristics, the occurrence of weight loss was significantly more frequent in the Xpert arm than in the MGIT arm (75.0% vs. 47.7%). White race (57.5% vs. 78.9%), HIV testing (75.0% vs. 94.6%), and dyspnea (52.5% vs. 77.2%) were less frequent, but comorbidity was higher (72.5% vs. 47.4%) in the LPA arm than in the MGIT arm (Table 2 and Table 3). Regarding the primary endpoint, the median time (in days) was lower in the Xpert arm than in the MGIT arm from triage to the adoption of appropriate TB treatment (15.0 vs. 40.5). Additionally, the median interval time (in days) was also lower in the Xpert arm from triage to the release of test results by the laboratory (2.2 vs. 32.5) and test results seen by physicians (7.0 vs. 55.5) (Table 4). For arm 2, the median time interval (in days) was lower for the LPA arm than for the MGIT arm from triage to test results being released by the laboratory (9.0 vs. 34.0) and test results seen by physicians (30.4 vs. 40.2) but not the adoption of an appropriate TB treatment (Table 4). Comparing the approaches to clinical decision making, a higher proportion of presumed DR-TB patients allocated to the LPA arm (35% vs. 12%) received the second-line regimen at the health unit of origin than those in the MGIT arm. At triage, among the subjects evaluated in the two arms, a higher rate of empirical treatment was observed with MGIT alone than with Xpert assays (97.0% vs. 45.0%) and LPA (98.2% vs. 67.5%) (Table 5).
TABLE 5:

TB treatment adopted at triage and during follow-up among DR-TB patients according to the intervention arm.

Intervention Arm
VariableArm 1 Arm 2
MGITXpertOR* (95%CI) P-valueMGITLPAOR* (95%CI) P-value
N (%)N (%) N (%)N (%)
Empirical treatment
Yes43 (97.7)9 (45.0) 56 (98.2)27 (67.5)26.9 (3.35-216.9)
1st line drug311752.5 (6.0-460.08)p<0.015026 p<0.001
2nd line drug1331.0 7141.0
No1 (2.3)11 (55.0) 1 (1.8)13 (32.5)
TB treatment adopted at triage
Maintained the regimen prescribed earlier by health unit17 (38.6)8 (40.0)0.94 (0.32-2.78)p=1.0029 (50.9)14 (35.0)1.92 (0.83-4.41)
Started new regimen27 (61.4)12 (60.0)1.0 28 (49.1)26 (65.0)1.0p=0.12
TB treatment that matches withreference standard DST(including those withempirical treatment)
Yes35 (100)14 (82.4)-p=0.0451 (100.0)29 (93.5)-p=0.14
No0 (0.0)3 (17.6) 0 (0.0)2 (6.5)
SSM 2nd month
Positive9 (27.3)3 (20.0)1.5 (0.34-6.58)p=0.7216 (43.2)11 (35.5)1.38 (0.52-3.7)p=0.51
Negative24 (72.7)12 (80.0)1,0 21 (56.8)20 (64.5)1.0
Not reported115 209
SSM 6th month
Positive6 (19.4)0 (0) p=0.164 (14.8)10 (34.5)0.33 (0.08-1.22)p=0.09
Negative25 (80.6)12 (100)- 23 (85.2)19 (65.5)1.0
Not reported138 3011
Culture 2nd month
Positive22 (64.7)5 (35.7)3.3 (0.89-12.1)p=0.0620 (54.1)13 (50.0)1.17 (0.43-3.21)p=0.75
Negative12 (35.3)9 (64.3)1.0 17 (45.9)13 (50.0)1.0
Not reported106 331
Culture 6th month
Positive6 (29.7)1 (9.1)2.60 (0.27-24.6)p=0.396 (17.0)6 (20.0)0.86 (0.24-3.01)p=0.81
Negative23 (79.3)10 (90.9)1.0 29 (83.0)25 (80.0)1.0
Not reported159- 229
Any change in TB treatment after the triage
Yes34 (77.3)14 (70.0)1.45 (0.44-4.78)p=0.5343 (75.4)25 (65.8)1.59 (0.64-3.93)p=0.30
No10 (22.7)6 (30.0)1.0 14 (24.6)13 (34.2)1.0
Not reported -- -2
Adverse reaction
Yes10 (23.8)4 (22.2)1.09 (0.29-4.09)p=1.005 (11.4)7 (18.9)0.54 (0.15-1.90)p=0.36
No32 (76.2)14 (77.8)1.0 39 (88.6)30 (81.1)1.0
Not applicable22 133
Treatment outcome at6th month
Favorable35 (79.5)17 (85.0)0.68 (0.16-2.86) 43 (76.8)29 (76.3)1.02 (0.38-2.7)p=0.95
Unfavorable9 (20.5)3 (15.0)1.0p=0.7413 (23.2)9 (23.7)1.0
Lost of follow-up31 81
Failure61 37
Death01 21
Transferred 12

Legend: SSM: sputum smear microscopy; OR: odds ratio; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert®MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay.

Legend: SSM: sputum smear microscopy; OR: odds ratio; MGIT: BactecTMMGITTM 960 system; Xpert: Xpert®MTB/RIF; LPA: line probe assay. At the sixth month, 26 (16.1%) had an adverse event, 17 (10.6%) failed treatment, 13 (8.0%) were lost to follow-up, 3 (1.8%) died, and 3 (1.8%) had been transferred to another healthcare unit. Among the 158 subjects who had been followed up, a favorable response was seen in 124 (78.5%), and culture conversion by the sixth month after trial enrollment occurred in 81.4% (79/97) of patients. During anti-TB treatment, for arm 1, the following variables did not differ significantly among subjects allocated to the Xpert and MGIT arms: culture conversion at the sixth month (90.9% vs. 79.3%, p=0.39), occurrence of an adverse event (22.2% vs. 23.8%), and favorable treatment outcome (85.0% vs. 79.5%). Similar results were observed for arm 2 among subjects allocated to the LPA and MGIT arms: culture conversion by the sixth month (80.0% vs. 83.0%, p=0.81), occurrence of an adverse event (18.9% vs. 11.4%), and favorable treatment outcome (76.3% vs. 76.8%) (Table 5).

DISCUSSION

We carried out a pragmatic, multicenter, prospective interventional trial to evaluate the clinical impact of the adoption of the Xpert assay and LPA on the diagnostic and treatment cascades of DR/MDR-TB patients attending DR-TB reference centers in a high-burden country, in conditions similar to those observed within routine health services and in patients who were similar to those who would need treatment in the future. The aim was to answer questions regarding the applicability of new technologies in the healthcare system, extending beyond the issues related to efficacy typically evaluated in explanatory clinical trials. The time (days) from triage to DST test result release and results received by clinicians were lower in the Xpert and LPA arms than in the MGIT arm, similar to the results reported by other studies - involving LPA and by Padayatchi et al. (2016) using the Xpert assay. However, the time (days) from triage to the adoption of a TB treatment that matched the standard reference DST result was shorter in the Xpert arm, consistent with Padayatchi et al. (2016), but not in the LPA arm, contrary to the results reported in other studies - , , wherein a shorter time from triage to the start of TB treatment in patients was observed in the LPA group. A higher percentage of negative cultures in the sixth month after enrollment was observed in the Xpert arm but not in the LPA arm. These results differed from those reported elsewhere , , , where a lower proportion of negative cultures in the sixth or eighth month was observed after screening with LPA. The greater conversion of culture in the sixth month in the Xpert arm may result from the quicker adoption of an appropriate treatment regimen observed in the Xpert arm than in the MGIT arm. This scenario did not occur when comparing the LPA and MGIT assays. The transport of the samples to distant places and the delivery of results were carried out by a motorcycle courier. The Xpert arm did not require a laboratory and specialized team; therefore, the test was performed locally. This factor influenced the speed of DST results seen by physicians. Recently, Albert et al. (2016) noted that the computerization of the diagnostic investigation process of TB plays a central role in the incorporation of new diagnostic technologies, facilitating the transfer of test results to the clinical area and circumventing the difficulties identified in our study . For the MGIT groups, a greater proportion of patients were treated empirically (98%) than those in the Xpert (45%) and LPA (67%) groups. This finding could be explained by the delay in the release of phenotypic drug sensitivity results. Thus, clinicians needed to initiate treatment solely based on smear microscopy results, history of previous anti-TB regimens used, clinical symptoms, and chest X-ray findings to treat patients more quickly, as delayed treatment would aggravate the disease and increase the risk of death, in addition to maintaining the chain of transmission . In this study, at the sixth-month post-trial enrollment, the proportion of favorable outcomes with anti-TB treatment was similar in the Xpert and LPA arms, as compared to that in the MGIT arm; this differs from the results reported by Singla et al. and Eliseev et al., in which a greater proportion of favorable outcomes was observed with LPA, but is consistent with Padayatchi et al., who did not report this impact with the Xpert assay , , . These discordant results may stem from the fact that both the Xpert and LPA arms, compared to the MGIT arm, had similar rates of correct treatment based on the results of the standard reference DST, despite a higher proportion of empirical treatments in the MGIT arm. Additionally, due to the small sample size, there was an insufficient number of patients to show a difference. In the Xpert arm, 73% of patients who harbored Mtb complex isolates resistant to RIF had MDR-TB, while in the LPA arm, 85.2% were classified as having MDR-TB. Therefore, LPA was more likely to correctly classify MDR-TB according to the reference standard DST (MGIT) results. These results suggest that LPA may be a useful technology for the diagnosis of DR-TB. However, it is necessary to increase the efficiency of the transfer of laboratory results to the clinical team, computerize the processes, and increase the ability to promptly contact patients to initiate TB treatment. Conversely, there is a great advantage in using Xpert compared with MGIT assays and LPA. The latter techniques can only be performed in central laboratories, requiring specialized laboratory technicians, whereas Xpert assays can be performed in less complex laboratories; therefore, these laboratories are situated closer to patient care centers. In this study, false-positive results for RIF resistance were similar in the Xpert and LPA arms (13% and 14.8%, respectively). These results are higher than those reported in the literature (5%-12%). As the level of resistance (according to the MIC) was not measured in the reference standard DST, and the presence of mixed infection or heteroresistance in the respiratory samples of patients with DR-TB was not analyzed, we cannot rule out the variables that would clarify the high proportion of false positives attained in this case. Although the proportion of HIV-infected patients observed in the LPA arm (18%) was higher than that in the Xpert arm (8%), there was no significant difference between the smear-negative TB and MDR-TB cases in the Xpert and LPA arms. The literature reports , , , that HIV-infected patients with smear-negative TB are commonly treated empirically, generating unnecessary costs and more toxicities due to inadequate treatment. Although this finding was not observed in this series, the proportion of unfavorable outcomes in HIV-infected patients with MDR-TB was usually high. The mortality rate in these patients may reach 25% in populations with a high prevalence of HIV infection, which is related to the delay in diagnosis - . In this pragmatic trial, as the unit of randomization consisted of health units, with a small number of presumed DR-TB patients included in the triage in each participant’s health unit, differences in patient characteristics were observed between the Xpert, LPA, and MGIT arms. In the Xpert arm, a greater rate of weight loss was observed. In the LPA arm, there was a higher proportion of patients with comorbidities, and in the MGIT evaluation, more patients were white, had dyspnea, and underwent HIV testing. These results represent a limitation of this study. The higher frequency of dyspnea occurrence among patients allocated to the MGIT arm than those allocated to the LPA arm may be a consequence of a poor interpretation of fatigue by the patient, as a specific data collection instrument to measure dyspnea was not used. Although a higher occurrence of comorbidities in the LPA arm was observed, no significant association of this factor with unfavorable outcomes (adverse effects, death) was observed, likely due to the small number of patients included. Another important finding is that the greater conversion of culture in the sixth month in the Xpert arm may have resulted from the quicker adoption of an appropriate treatment regimen observed in the Xpert arm than in the MGIT arm. This scenario did not occur when comparing the LPA vs. MGIT assay; as LPA was performed in culture rather than in clinical samples, and the transport of the samples to distant places and the delivery of results were carried out by a motorcycle courier. The Xpert arm did not require a laboratory or specialized team, used clinical samples, and the test was performed locally. The strengths of this study include the following: (a) this was a pragmatic RCT that enrolled presumed DR/MDR-TB subjects attending five DR-TB reference sites in four provinces under routine conditions; (b) the personnel performing the Xpert, LPA, or MGIT assays were unaware of the patients’ clinical or radiographic findings; and (c) only patients with culture-confirmed TB who underwent DST were included. A limitation of the study is that it relied on a small sample size for patients with DR-TB. This limits the statistical analysis and power of the study, and the results may not be useful for generalizing the entire country. In addition, there might have been a confounding effect of time since MGIT assays were always conducted in the second period. Discordant results between MGIT assays and Xpert assays or LPA were not evaluated by sequencing. No follow-up information was collected from DR-TB suspects referred to the reference center without bacteriological confirmation. In conclusion, the incorporation of rapid molecular tests reduced the proportion of empirical treatment and accelerated correct therapeutic decision-making and treatment initiation. Improvement of the flow of DR/MDR-TB diagnosis is warranted to optimize the use of new technologies. At 6 months post-enrollment, the rate of culture conversion was higher in the Xpert arm; however, there was no difference in treatment outcomes between patients allocated to the Xpert and LPA arms and those in the MGIT arm.
  19 in total

1.  Beyond accuracy: creating a comprehensive evidence base for TB diagnostic tools.

Authors:  G Mann; S B Squire; K Bissell; P Eliseev; E Du Toit; A Hesseling; M Nicol; A Detjen; A Kritski
Journal:  Int J Tuberc Lung Dis       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 2.373

2.  Surveillance of anti-tuberculosis drug resistance in the world: an updated analysis, 2007-2010.

Authors:  Matteo Zignol; Wayne van Gemert; Dennis Falzon; Charalambos Sismanidis; Philippe Glaziou; Katherine Floyd; Mario Raviglione
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2011-11-07       Impact factor: 9.408

3.  Revisiting susceptibility testing in MDR-TB by a standardized quantitative phenotypic assessment in a European multicentre study.

Authors:  E Cambau; M Viveiros; D Machado; L Raskine; C Ritter; E Tortoli; V Matthys; S Hoffner; E Richter; M L Perez Del Molino; D M Cirillo; D van Soolingen; E C Böttger
Journal:  J Antimicrob Chemother       Date:  2014-11-11       Impact factor: 5.790

Review 4.  Mixed-strain mycobacterium tuberculosis infections and the implications for tuberculosis treatment and control.

Authors:  Ted Cohen; Paul D van Helden; Douglas Wilson; Caroline Colijn; Megan M McLaughlin; Ibrahim Abubakar; Robin M Warren
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 26.132

Review 5.  Diagnosis of smear-negative pulmonary tuberculosis in people with HIV infection or AIDS in resource-constrained settings: informing urgent policy changes.

Authors:  Haileyesus Getahun; Mark Harrington; Rick O'Brien; Paul Nunn
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2007-06-16       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  Significant clinical impact of a rapid molecular diagnostic test (Genotype MTBDRplus assay) to detect multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.

Authors:  Maia Kipiani; Veriko Mirtskhulava; Nestani Tukvadze; Matthew Magee; Henry M Blumberg; Russell R Kempker
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2014-08-04       Impact factor: 9.079

7.  Implementation and Operational Research: Clinical Impact of the Xpert MTB/RIF Assay in Patients With Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis.

Authors:  Nesri Padayatchi; Naressa Naidu; Nonhlanhla Yende-Zuma; Max Roe OʼDonnell; Kogieleum Naidoo; Stanton Augustine; Alimuddin Zumla; Marian Loveday
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2016-09-01       Impact factor: 3.731

8.  Transmission of tuberculosis from smear negative patients: a molecular epidemiology study.

Authors:  E Hernández-Garduño; V Cook; D Kunimoto; R K Elwood; W A Black; J M FitzGerald
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 9.139

9.  The Impact of a Line Probe Assay Based Diagnostic Algorithm on Time to Treatment Initiation and Treatment Outcomes for Multidrug Resistant TB Patients in Arkhangelsk Region, Russia.

Authors:  Platon Eliseev; Grigory Balantcev; Elena Nikishova; Anastasia Gaida; Elena Bogdanova; Donald Enarson; Tara Ornstein; Anne Detjen; Russell Dacombe; Elena Gospodarevskaya; Patrick P J Phillips; Gillian Mann; Stephen Bertel Squire; Andrei Mariandyshev
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-04-07       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 10.  Development, roll-out and impact of Xpert MTB/RIF for tuberculosis: what lessons have we learnt and how can we do better?

Authors:  Heidi Albert; Ruvandhi R Nathavitharana; Chris Isaacs; Madhukar Pai; Claudia M Denkinger; Catharina C Boehme
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2016-07-13       Impact factor: 16.671

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