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Impact of molecular diagnostic tests on diagnostic and treatment delays in tuberculosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis

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Authors

Lee, Jae Hyoung; Garg, Tushar; Lee, Jungsil; McGrath, Sean; Rosman, Lori; Schumacher, Samuel G.; Benedetti, Andrea; Qin, Zhi Zhen; Gore, Genevieve; Pai, Madhukar; Sohn, Hojoon

Issue Date
2022-12-14
Publisher
BMC
Citation
BMC Infectious Diseases, 22(1):940
Keywords
Nucleic acid amplification testsCommunicable diseasesPoint-of-Care SystemsGlobal Health
Abstract
Background
Countries with high TB burden have expanded access to molecular diagnostic tests. However, their impact on reducing delays in TB diagnosis and treatment has not been assessed. Our primary aim was to summarize the quantitative evidence on the impact of nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT) on diagnostic and treatment delays compared to that of the standard of care for drug-sensitive and drug-resistant tuberculosis (DS-TB and DR-TB).


Methods
We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, and the Global Health databases (from their inception to October 12, 2020) and extracted time delay data for each test. We then analysed the diagnostic and treatment initiation delay separately for DS-TB and DR-TB by comparing smear vs Xpert for DS-TB and culture drug sensitivity testing (DST) vs line probe assay (LPA) for DR-TB. We conducted random effects meta-analyses of differences of the medians to quantify the difference in diagnostic and treatment initiation delay, and we investigated heterogeneity in effect estimates based on the period the test was used in, empiric treatment rate, HIV prevalence, healthcare level, and study design. We also evaluated methodological differences in assessing time delays.


Results
A total of 45 studies were included in this review (DS = 26; DR = 20). We found considerable heterogeneity in the definition and reporting of time delays across the studies. For DS-TB, the use of Xpert reduced diagnostic delay by 1.79days (95% CI − 0.27 to 3.85) and treatment initiation delay by 2.55days (95% CI 0.54–4.56) in comparison to sputum microscopy. For DR-TB, use of LPAs reduced diagnostic delay by 40.09days (95% CI 26.82–53.37) and treatment initiation delay by 45.32days (95% CI 30.27–60.37) in comparison to any culture DST methods.


Conclusions
Our findings indicate that the use of World Health Organization recommended diagnostics for TB reduced delays in diagnosing and initiating TB treatment. Future studies evaluating performance and impact of diagnostics should consider reporting time delay estimates based on the standardized reporting framework.
ISSN
1471-2334
Language
English
URI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-022-07855-9

https://hdl.handle.net/10371/187371
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-022-07855-9
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