1. Tuberculosis Case Finding With Combined Rapid Point-of-Care Assays (Xpert MTB/RIF and Determine TB LAM) in HIV-Positive Individuals Starting Antiretroviral Therapy in Mozambique.
- Author
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Floridia, Marco, Ciccacci, Fausto, Andreotti, Mauro, Hassane, Archa, Sidumo, Zita, Magid, Nurja A., Sotomane, Horacio, David, Muhlavasse, Mutemba, Elsa, Cebola, Junia, Mugunhe, Remigio Josè, Riccardi, Fabio, Marazzi, Maria Cristina, Giuliano, Marina, Palombi, Leonardo, and Mancinelli, Sandro
- Subjects
MYCOBACTERIAL disease diagnosis ,DRUG therapy for tuberculosis ,TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,ALGORITHMS ,HEMOGLOBINS ,HIV infections ,MEDICAL screening ,SPUTUM ,TUBERCULOSIS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CD4 lymphocyte count ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Background. Tuberculosis is a major health concern in several countries, and effective diagnostic algorithms for use in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive patients are urgently needed. Methods. At prescription of antiretroviral therapy, all patients in 3 Mozambican health centers were screened for tuberculosis, with a combined approach: World Health Organization (WHO) 4-symptom screening (fever, cough, night sweats, and weight loss), a rapid test detecting mycobacterial lipoarabinomannan in urine (Determine TB LAM), and a molecular assay performed on a sputum sample (Xpert MTB/RIF; repeated if first result was negative). Patients with positive LAM or Xpert MTB/RIF results were referred for tuberculosis treatment. Results. Among 972 patients with a complete diagnostic algorithm (58.5% female; median CD4 cell count, 278/μL; WHO HIV stage I, 66.8%), 98 (10.1%) tested positive with Xpert (90, 9.3%) or LAM (34, 3.5%) assays. Compared with a single-test Xpert strategy, dual Xpert tests improved case finding by 21.6%, LAM testing alone improved it by 13.5%, and dual Xpert tests plus LAM testing improved it by 32.4%. Rifampicin resistance in Xpert-positive patients was infrequent (2.5%). Among patients with positive results, 22 of 98 (22.4%) had no symptoms at WHO 4-symptom screening. Patients with tuberculosis diagnosed had significantly lower CD4 cell counts and hemoglobin levels, more advanced WHO stage, and higher HIV RNA levels. Fifteen (15.3%) did not start tuberculosis treatment, mostly owing to rapidly deteriorating clinical conditions or logistical constraints. The median interval between start of the diagnostic algorithm and start of tuberculosis treatment was 7 days. Conclusions. The prevalence of tuberculosis among Mozambican HIV-positive patients starting antiretroviral therapy was 10%, with limited rifampicin resistance. Use of combined point-of-care tests increased case finding, with a short time to treatment. Interventions are needed to remove logistical barriers and prevent presentation in very advanced HIV/tuberculosis disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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