Showing posts with label Rapid Diagnostic Test for Tuberculosis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rapid Diagnostic Test for Tuberculosis. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 July 2011

TUBERCULOSIS: Alternative Methods for Diagnosing TB

7/13 BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (Ivanhoe Newswire) –


(AP Photo)
(AP Photo)

Two new methods to diagnosing tuberculosis, an endemic infectious disease, can be used in poor countries.
One study suggests that less sputum tests collected the same day of consultation are needed and the other suggests that a faster laboratory test can be used while maintaining the same level of accuracy for diagnosis. Both studies show that alternative, less labor-intensive tests that are more convenient for patients could be effectively used in poorer countries.
The researchers enrolled 6627 patients in Ethiopia, Nepal, Nigeria and Yemen who had had a cough for more than two weeks (a characteristic symptom of tuberculosis).
In the main trial the centers participating in the study were randomly assigned each week for a year to use different methods of sputum collection. The results suggest that a sputum collection scheme in which two samples are collected one hour apart followed by a morning specimen could identify as many smear-positive patients as the standard "spot-morning-spot" scheme in which patients provide an on-the-spot specimen during their initial consultation, a specimen collected at home the next morning, and another on-the-spot specimen when they bring their morning specimen to the clinic. The study also confirmed that examination of the first two specimens alone identifies most smear-positive patients, independently of which scheme is used.
"The identification of the majority of smear-positive patients may require no more than one patient visit, and the scheme presented here has the potential to improve the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in Low and Middle-Income Countries. A single-visit diagnosis would represent a substantial opportunity to improve the delivery of TB services, particularly to the poor," the authors were quoted as saying.
In the second study, which is a sub-study of the main trial, the researchers examined nearly 2,400 patients to show that a faster laboratory test, a variant form of smear microscopy—light emitting-diode fluorescence microscopy (LED-FM)— could identify more people with tuberculosis than the standard smear microscopy test (in which technicians use a stain called Ziehl Neelsen from a patient's sputum). However LED-FM might also lead to more people without tuberculosis being needlessly treated, as this test picks up more false positives, that is, people who don't have TB but who are incorrectly classified as test-positive for the disease.
"This study has shown that LED-FM can play a key role in reaching the [World Health Organization] targets for TB detection, reducing laboratory workloads, and ensuring poor patients' access to TB diagnosis and prompt treatment," the authors said.

SOURCE: PLoS, published online July 12, 2011
http://www.cbs42.com/content/health/story/Alternative-Methods-for-Diagnosing-TB/_HsVL1rQjEGr8Fuk289xrg.cspx

Sunday, 12 June 2011

TUBERCULOSIS: India: the country accounting for 1 in 5 of all TB cases reported globally

Vishnu Vardhan KamineniTahir TurkNevin WilsonSrinath SathyanarayanaLakbir Singh Chauhan
Credits/Source: BMC Public Health 2011, 11:463
 
A rapid assessment and response approach to review and enhance Advocacy, Communication and Social Mobilisation for Tuberculosis control in Odisha state, India

Tuberculosis remains a major public health problem in India with the country accounting for 1 in 5 of all TB cases reported globally. An advocacy, communication and social mobilisation project for Tuberculosis control was implemented and evaluated in Odisha state of India.
The purpose of the study was to identify the impact of project interventions including the use of 'Interface NGOs'and involvement of community groups such as women's self-help groups, local government bodies, village health sanitation committees, and general health staff in promoting TB control efforts.

Methods: The study utilized a rapid assessment and response (RAR) methodology. The approach combined both qualitative field work approaches, including semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions with empirical data collection and desk research.

Results: Results revealed that a combination of factors including the involvement of Interface NGOs, coupled with increased training and engagement of front line health workers and community groups, and dissemination of community based resources, contributed to improved awareness and knowledge about TB in the targeted districts.
Project activities also contributed towards improving health worker and community effectiveness to raise the TB agenda, and improved TB literacy and treatment adherence. Engagement of successfully treated patients also assisted in reducing community stigma and discrimination.

Conclusion: The expanded use of advocacy, communication and social mobilisation activities in TB control has resulted in a number of benefits.
These include bridging pre-existing gaps between the health system and the community through support and coordination of general health services stakeholders, NGOs and the community. The strategic use of 'tailored messages'to address specific TB problems in low performing areas also led to more positive behavioural outcomes and improved efficiencies in service delivery.
Implications for future studies are that a comprehensive and well planned range of ACSM activities can enhance TB knowledge, attitudes and behaviours while also mobilising specific community groups to build community efficacy to combat TB. The use of rapid assessments combined with other complementary evaluation approaches can be effective when reviewing the impact of TB advocacy, communication and social mobilisation activities.
http://7thspace.com/headlines/385735/a_rapid_assessment_and_response_approach_to_review_and_enhance_advocacy_communication_and_social_mobilisation_for_tuberculosis_control_in_odisha_state_india.html

Tuesday, 12 April 2011

TUBERCULOSIS: Rapid Tuberculosis Diagnostic Methods Inaccurate Alone


April 04, 2011.

Rapid microbial and immunological diagnostic methods are not accurate enough to diagnose or exclude pulmonary tuberculosis, according to a study published online March 21 in the Journal of Internal Medicine.

MONDAY, April 4 (HealthDay News) -- Rapid microbial and immunological diagnostic methods are not accurate enough to diagnose or exclude pulmonary tuberculosis, according to a study published online March 21 in the Journal of Internal Medicine.
Claudia Jafari, M.D., from the Research Center Borstel in Germany, and colleagues evaluated different methods used for an initial treatment decision in 135 individuals with suspected pulmonary tuberculosis. A specific algorithm including initial smear microscopy and M. tuberculosis-specific nucleic acid amplification from sputum, was used to enroll individuals with suspected tuberculosis. Tuberculin skin testing, bronchoscopy with transbronchial biopsies, and interferon-γ release assays (IGRAs) in peripheral blood and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid were performed in cases of negative test results.
The researchers identified 42 cases of tuberculosis, 10 cases of non-tuberculous mycobacteria pulmonary infection/colonization, and 84 with a different diagnosis. Sputum microscopy had sensitivity of 41 percent and specificity of 99 percent. BAL nucleic acid amplification had sensitivity of 31 percent and specificity of 98 percent. M. tuberculosis-specific BAL fluid IGRAs had 92 percent sensitivity and 87 percent specificity for the tuberculosis diagnosis in patients with acid-fast bacilli smear-negative tuberculosis.
"The key finding of the study was that none of the evaluated methods alone was able to reliably diagnose or exclude tuberculosis," the authors write. "A stepwise diagnostic approach may yield the best results for a rapid preliminary diagnosis of tuberculosis, justifying treatment initiation while the results of M. tuberculosis cultures are pending."
http://www.doctorslounge.com/index.php/news/pb/19092

Tuesday, 18 January 2011

TUBERCULOSIS: WHO recommends against inaccurate tuberculosis tests

Kelly Morris
Misleading serology tests for tuberculosis could be worsening the epidemic in some high-burden countries. WHO will be issuing policy advice against their use in early 2011. Kelly Morris reports.
Although no international guideline recommends their use, scores of commercial serology tests for tuberculosis are being sold in high-burden countries. Some are laboratory-based tests, whereas others are rapid dipstick tests, which could fill a vital niche for a point-of-care tuberculosis diagnostic test. “If they worked, the problem of a gap in the pipeline for a point-of-care assay would have been solved decades ago”, comments Madhukar Pai, co-chair of the STOP-TB Partnership's new diagnostics working group. “The pity is that they don't work. In fact, they're inaccurate and useless.”
WHO is due to release a negative policy recommendation—the first of its kind for the organisation—on current commercial tuberculosis serodiagnostics. Results of several meta-analyses have indicated poor performance of these tests, and in 2008, an assessment of 19 commercial assays by TDR—the UN special programme for research and training in tropical diseases—found that none of the assays were good enough to replace sputum microscopy or as an add-on test to rule out tuberculosis. Manufacturers continue to claim that their tests are effective and fill a diagnostic niche, especially in sputum smear-negative patient groups.
Karin Weyer, WHO coordinator of TB diagnostics and laboratory strengthening, told The Lancet that “the negative policy process is a new concept in WHO”. But, she says, the process has been identical to that for positive recommendations, such as the endorsement announced on Dec 8 of a fully automated nucleic-acid amplification test (Xpert MTB/RIF, Cepheid) to improve tuberculosis diagnosis.
The available evidence on serodiagnostic kits has now been rigorously assessed, including meta-analyses when appropriate, and reviewed by an independent WHO expert group, says Weyer. “The expert group endorsed the findings from an updated systematic review since the TDR report in 2008 and essentially concluded that we should proceed with negative policy guidance based on the fact that the performance characteristics of these tests were way below what one would want and also because the quality of the data were so weak and so bad that it warranted a recommendation against the use of these tests”, she explains.
“Everyone is aware of the consequences of bad drugs and vaccines, but nobody really thinks about bad diagnostics and what impact they can have”, comments Pai. In their report, released at the end of December, the WHO Strategic and Technical Advisory Group for TB acknowledges “the adverse impact of misdiagnosis and wasted resources on patients and health services when using these tests for the diagnosis of active TB”, and recommends WHO to proceed with written guidance advising against current serodiagnostic kits. Further targeted research is strongly recommended since potential exists for research to develop accurate serologic assays, which could fill the point-of-care niche. WHO is being careful with preparation of the negative policy so as not to stifle innovation and research investment in tuberculosis diagnostics, says Weyer.
Commercial serodiagnostic kits are widely available, but the problem is probably greatest in India, where Pai estimates that serodiagnostic kits are used on at least 1·5 million people with suspected tuberculosis every year. Such testing is not done through the Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP) but through the unregulated private sector, which manages a substantial proportion of tuberculosis cases. Patients pay for serodiagnostic kits, and the market is estimated conservatively at over $US15 million in India alone, compared with $65 million for the entire RNTCP.
Despite country-wide DOTS coverage by the RNTCP, India continues to have more than 2 million new cases of tuberculosis every year. Ongoing transmission will not be reduced without intensified early case detection, which first relies on access to quality diagnosis. Writing in The New Yorker on Nov 15, journalist Michael Specter described how, in India, “for most patients, the choices are bleak”—overcrowded public hospitals versus unreliable tests at unregulated private laboratories or clinics.
Everyone in the private-sector chain gets a cut of patient fees—up to $10—30 per serodiagnostic kit—especially the referring doctors and private clinicians, who are often the same individual, Specter reports. Financial incentives perpetuate this system, Pai explains, since: “a private practitioner may not order sputum microscopy because you don't make much money out of a cheap test like sputum smears. The more expensive the test ordered, the more money you get back”, he explains.
The available evidence indicates that current tests lack either the necessary sensitivity or specificity or both to be an effective diagnostic test, and for many of these tests, false results far outnumber true results. Low sensitivity means increased false-negative results, which increase morbidity, mortality, and ongoing transmission of tuberculosis. Low specificity means more false-positive results; patients might then be given 6 months of potentially toxic treatment, while their underlying pathology remains uninvestigated and undiagnosed.
Many commercial tuberculosis serology kits are manufactured in China or India, but some are from western countries, such as France, the UK, Canada, and the USA. These manufacturers are selling high volumes of their test kits in countries such as India, although their tests are not licensed or used in the countries that make them.
During WHO's systematic review process, says Weyer, “we quickly discovered that manufacturers of these commercial serodiagnostics simply change the name of the test frequently and re-market and re-sell the same test under a new brand name. So, teasing out which test belonged to which brand name and updating the previous review by TDR proved to be a real challenge, as we wanted to be as solid as we could possibly be on the actual evidence.”
The key question is how much will the WHO guidance affect the sale and use of these tests in the private sector? “The ideal is that the public sector would be attractive enough and use state-of-the-art new tests, so that patients don't feel that they need to go to the private sector to get what they think may be a better diagnosis”, says Weyer.
However, given the extent of private-sector medicine, the concept of public—private mix (PPM) is being hailed in some quarters as the key to increasing efforts to tackle tuberculosis. The final report of WHO's subgroup on PPM for tuberculosis care and control advised earlier this year that countries need to scale up PPM, and involve provider groups outside national programmes to develop national strategic plans. Recommended approaches also include certification and accreditation of care providers and laboratories, and a system for mandatory notification of tuberculosis.
To achieve PPM recommendations, regulation of private-sector medicine will need to be developed and implemented in high-burden countries. What is absent from the PPM report is recognition that regulatory frameworks for diagnostic tests are also often weak or non-existent. WHO is helping countries establish regulatory systems to review the local relevance of diagnostics, and determine whether such tests should be marketed and sold, says Weyer. But, she foresees “a long-term difficult process”, as local expertise and capacity are often limited and regulatory frameworks need to be drawn up and passed through national legal systems country by country.
“Public-private partnership is the way to go”, asserts Camilla Rodrigues, a physician at the private Hinduja Hospital, in Mumbai, India, who has trialled the Xpert MTB/RIF system for diagnosis and drug-resistance testing of tuberculosis for more than 3 years. Rodrigues would like to see physician education on the unreliability of serology in endemic regions and laboratory accreditation encouraged. National governments need to provide guidelines for tuberculosis testing with “strict regulation in place for defaulters”, she says, adding that laboratories need diagnostic algorithms and strengthened capacity both for gold-standard tests, such as culture, and validated new molecular tests.
Weyer agrees, but notes that: “PPM alone will not overcome barriers presented by the lack of country regulatory frameworks for new diagnostics”. Nevertheless, market forces could play a part in developing and implementing better tuberculosis diagnostics. If Xpert MTB/RIF or other technologies are developed to become point-of-care tests, the private sector already has the infrastructure to deliver, and effective diagnostics could successfully replace inaccurate tests, says Pai.
The chief executive of a large private Indian diagnostic laboratory chain, Sanjeev Chaudhry, told The Lancet that Super Religare Laboratories strongly concurs in discouraging use of serodiagnostic kits in Indian settings. However, mere policy change might not be effective with the current magnitude of the challenge, he says, so, “instead of change in policy by private lab(s) in isolation or even as a consortium, we seriously feel that collective and dedicated efforts are required equally by the public- and private-sector service providers”.
As pathology service providers are expected to offer and satisfy the needs of the market, Chaudry continues that “we need to have an alternative cost-effective option along with appropriate awareness among clinicians and doctors”. Rodrigues notes that “the Indian diagnostic market is thriving. There is certainly potential for low-cost, accurate, and newer tests to be produced in India which will lower the cost.”
WHO guidance will be very clear, Weyer confirms, “to reflect the current commercial serodiagnostic tests but not to jeopardise future research and new antigen and biomarker discovery programmes that would guide and inform the development of point-of-care tests”.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(11)60005-6/fulltext?rss=yes

TUBERCULOSIS: Rapid Molecular Detection of Tuberculosis

Norbert Heinrich, M.D. Medical Center of the University of Munich heinrich@lrz.uni-muenchen.de (et al.)

Boehme et al. report encouraging results on the use of an automated molecular test for Mycobacterium tuberculosis and resistance to rifampin (Xpert MTB/RIF). However, the population of patients with clinical tuberculosis who have negative cultures still poses a problem of interpretation, which was not discussed in the article. Among study patients whose samples were culture-negative but who had symptoms of tuberculosis, 29.3% had positive results on the automated test; these patients made up 4.3% of the total number of automated test–positive patients.
In such patients, tuberculosis that was detected by the automated test may have had a false negative culture because of low bacillary load or overgrowth, but the possibility of false positivity cannot be excluded. Furthermore, 23 patients with nontuberculous mycobacteria in culture were excluded from the analysis. In our site in Tanzania and in other African locations, nontuberculous mycobacteria are frequently found in culture, so the capability of the automated test to discriminate between tuberculosis and nontuberculous
mycobacteria, for which preliminary results have been encouraging, would be of great interest.
More effort should be made in future studies to elaborate on these two groups, thus clearing an
uncertainty regarding the performance of the automated test.
http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJMc1011919

Monday, 13 December 2010

TUBERCULOSIS: New tuberculosis test cheaper for poor countries

Associated Press, 12.08.10
LONDON -- Health officials say a new test to diagnose tuberculosis will be available to poor countries for a fraction of its original price.
The Swiss-based Foundation for Innovative and New Diagnostics said a test to detect tuberculosis in less than two hours will be sold to more than 100 developing countries at a 75 percent discount - for about $17 instead of $67.
The World Health Organization said the test could revolutionize tuberculosis treatment and is a dramatic improvement on the standard test, which takes up to three months to confirm a diagnosis.
http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2010/12/08/health-eu-med-tuberculosis-test_8189434.html

TUBERCULOSIS: U.S. Global Health Programs Welcome World Health Organization Endorsement of Rapid Test for Tuberculosis

 Dec. 8, 2010 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Following is the text of a joint statement by the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), U.S. Agency for International Development and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The United States welcomes the policy statement and roadmap issued today by the World Health Organization (WHO) charting the rollout of the Xpert MTB/RIF rapid diagnostic test for tuberculosis (TB) and rifampicin resistance, a proxy for multidrug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB).
The limitations of traditional smear microscopy, along with the cost and long delays to receive culture results, have limited the ability to expeditiously diagnose and treat TB. The impact is witnessed daily in healthcare facilities and communities in the highest burden areas: increases in deaths that can be prevented, prolonged transmission of the TB bacteria, and delays in detecting drug resistance to the antibiotics we rely on to treat TB. The capacity to improve the diagnosis of TB has thus been a global priority, but the prospect of access to such a test was unthinkable just a few short years ago.
With today's release of normative guidance and an implementation roadmap by WHO, we have reason to be hopeful. With funding from the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, FIND (Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics) spearheaded a novel public-private partnership with Cepheid, Inc. and the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey to develop a TB-specific, automated nucleic amplification assay (Xpert MTB/RIF). This fully integrated and automated instrument has the capacity to detect the presence of TB disease and resistance to rifampicin in less than two hours. Of special importance to global health programs in rural areas, the tool can be decentralized to settings very close to where patients seek services in their communities.
The rapid test will be critical for programs supported by the U.S. Government, primarily through the bilateral programs of U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and in high HIV-prevalence contexts benefitting from PEPFAR support. The U.S. Government agencies contributing to global TB control, namely USAID, PEPFAR, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), are committed to working together to support the rapid scale-up and appropriate use of this new technology.
Ambassador Eric Goosby, M.D., U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator commented, "WHO's endorsement is welcome news to PEPFAR given the real impact this new rapid test will have on saving lives. With this endorsement, PEPFAR now has validation of the evidence base for this tool as well as a roadmap for implementation and field-level evaluations to be accelerated in 2011. HIV-associated TB is the leading cause of death among people living with HIV in the Africa region. During the early years of PEPFAR, the U.S. has partnered with Ministries of Health, strengthening and expanding laboratory services to support HIV testing, care of opportunistic infections (including TB diagnosis and treatment), and monitoring of antiretroviral treatment. We look forward to further partnering with Ministries of Health, WHO, FIND and other partners to ensure that we use the platform established through PEPFAR to facilitate the rapid uptake of this critical new technology."
Dr. Raj Shah, USAID Administrator said, "Rapid diagnosis, coupled with improved health delivery systems and stronger community awareness, is critical to the early detection and treatment of TB. To win the fight against TB we must slow the growth of drug resistance by providing quality basic TB control, investing in the rapid and appropriate uptake of Xpert MTB/RIF and other new technologies and continuing to support the research and development of new tools. USAID stands ready to support the roll-out of this new technology, including the advancement of sound international policy, training and impact monitoring."
Dr. Thomas Frieden, CDC Director said, "Having a reliable test that can detect TB and MDR-TB in less than two hours from a patient's sputum specimen is a great tool. This is especially important in caring for HIV-infected persons who are at greatest risk for rapid progression of TB disease, and in whom this disease is a leading cause of death. It is also important to prevent prolonged delays in diagnosis and to ensure appropriate treatment in areas where multidrug resistant TB is common. Xpert MTB/RIF rapid diagnostic test for TB and MDR TB, in conjunction with effective tuberculosis diagnosis, treatment, and monitoring, will help reduce disease and death from TB."

Public Information: 202-712-4810: SOURCE U.S. Agency for International Development

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/us-global-health-programs-welcome-world-health-organization-endorsement-of-rapid-test-for-tuberculosis-111546774.html