Author/Authors :
Zhang, Annie Department of Microbiology - College of Arts and Sciences - The Ohio State University - Columbus - Ohio, United States , Kwiek, Jesse J. Department of Microbiology - College of Arts and Sciences - The Ohio State University - Columbus - Ohio, United States , Jumbe, Enoch Child Legacy International - Msundwe - Lilongwe, Malawi , Chemey, Elly K. Child Legacy International - Msundwe - Lilongwe, Malawi , Krysiak, Robert Department of Infectious Diseases - School of Medicine - University of North Carolina Project - Tidziwe Centre - Lilongwe, Malawi , Sidiki, Sabeen Department of Microbial Infection and Immunity - College of Medicine - The Ohio State University - Columbus - Ohio, United States , Kelley, Holden V. Department of Microbial Infection and Immunity - College of Medicine - The Ohio State University - Columbus - Ohio, United States , Torrelles, Jordi B. Department of Microbial Infection and Immunity - College of Medicine - The Ohio State University - Columbus - Ohio, United States , Kamba, Chancy District Tuberculosis Control Office - Ministry of Health - Lilongwe, Malawi , Mwapasa, Victor Department of Community Health - College of Medicine - Blantyre, Malawi , García, Juan I. Department of Pediatrics - Obstetrics, Gynecology and Preventive Medicine - Autonomous University of Barcelona - Barcelona, Spain , Norris, Alison No Affiliation , Pan, Xueliang J. No Affiliation , Evans, Carlton No Affiliation , Wang, Shu-Hua No Affiliation
Abstract :
Rural settings where molecular tuberculosis diagnostics are not currently available need easy-to-use tests that do not require additional processing or equipment. While acid-fast bacilli (AFB) smear is the most common and often only tuberculosis diagnosis test performed in rural settings, it is labour intensive, has less-than-ideal sensitivity, and cannot assess tuberculosis drug susceptibility patterns.
Objective
The objective of this study was to determine the feasibility of a multidrug-resistant (MDR) or extensively drug-resistant (XDR)-tuberculosis coloured agar-based culture test (tuberculosis CX-test), which can detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth and evaluate for drug susceptibility to isoniazid, rifampicin and a fluoroquinolone (i.e. ciprofloxacin) in approximately 14 days.
Method
In this study, 101 participants were enrolled who presented to a rural health clinic in central Malawi. They were suspected of having active pulmonary tuberculosis. Participants provided demographic and clinical data and submitted sputum samples for tuberculosis testing using the AFB smear and tuberculosis CX-test.
Results
The results showed a high level of concordance between the AFB smear (12 positive) and tuberculosis CX-test (13 positive); only one sample presented discordant results, with the molecular GeneXpert MTB/RIF® test confirming the tuberculosis CX-test results. The average time to a positive tuberculosis CX-test was 10 days. Of the positive samples, the tuberculosis CX-test detected no cases of drug resistance, which was later confirmed by the GeneXpert MTB/RIF®.
Conclusion
These findings demonstrate that the tuberculosis CX-test could be a reliable low-cost diagnostic method for active pulmonary tuberculosis in high tuberculosis burden rural areas.
Keywords :
Low-cost diagnostic test , susceptible , drug-resistant tuberculosis , rural Malawi , MDR , acid-fast bacilli (AFB)