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Xpert MTB/RIF Testing in a Low Tuberculosis Incidence, High-Resource Setting: Limitations in Accuracy and Clinical Impact

Cited 71 time in Web of Science Cited 83 time in Scopus
Authors

Sohn, Hojoon; Aero, Abebech D.; Menzies, Dick; Behr, Marcel; Schwartzman, Kevin; Alvarez, Gonzalo G.; Dan, Andrei; McIntosh, Fiona; Pai, Madhukar; Denkinger, Claudia M.

Issue Date
2014-04
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
Citation
CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, Vol.58 No.7, pp.970-976
Abstract
Background. Xpert MTB/RIF, the first automated molecular test for tuberculosis, is transforming the diagnostic landscape in low-income countries. However, little information is available on its performance in low-incidence, high-resource countries. Methods. We evaluated the accuracy of Xpert in a university hospital tuberculosis clinic in Montreal, Canada, for the detection of pulmonary tuberculosis on induced sputum samples, using mycobacterial cultures as the reference standard. We also assessed the potential reduction in time to diagnosis and treatment initiation. Results. We enrolled 502 consecutive patients who presented for evaluation of possible active tuberculosis (most with abnormal chest radiographs, only 18% symptomatic). Twenty-five subjects were identified to have active tuberculosis by culture. Xpert had a sensitivity of 46% (95% confidence interval [CI], 26%-67%) and specificity of 100% (95% CI, 99%-100%) for detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Sensitivity was 86% (95% CI, 42%-100%) in the 7 subjects with smear-positive results, and 28% (95% CI, 10%-56%) in the remaining subjects with smear-negative, culture-positive results; in this latter group, positive Xpert results were obtained a median 12 days before culture results. Subjects with positive cultures but negative Xpert results had minimal disease: 11 of 13 had no symptoms on presentation, and mean time to positive liquid culture results was 28 days (95% CI, 25-47 days) compared with 14 days (95% CI, 8-21 days) in Xpert/culture-positive cases. Conclusions. Our findings suggest limited potential impact of Xpert testing in high-resource, low-incidence ambulatory settings due to lower sensitivity in the context of less extensive disease, and limited potential to expedite diagnosis beyond what is achieved with the existing, well-performing diagnostic algorithm.
ISSN
1058-4838
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/201769
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciu022
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Human Systems Medicine
Research Area 결핵, 국제보건, 에이즈

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