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A Controlled Study of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected and Uninfected Children in Peru

BACKGROUND: Diagnosing tuberculosis in children is challenging because specimens are difficult to obtain and contain low tuberculosis concentrations, especially with HIV-coinfection. Few studies included well-controls so test specificities are poorly defined. We studied tuberculosis diagnosis in 525...

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Autores principales: Oberhelman, Richard A., Soto-Castellares, Giselle, Gilman, Robert H., Castillo, Maria E., Kolevic, Lenka, Delpino, Trinidad, Saito, Mayuko, Salazar-Lindo, Eduardo, Negron, Eduardo, Montenegro, Sonia, Laguna-Torres, V. Alberto, Maurtua-Neumann, Paola, Datta, Sumona, Evans, Carlton A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4416048/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25927526
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120915
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author Oberhelman, Richard A.
Soto-Castellares, Giselle
Gilman, Robert H.
Castillo, Maria E.
Kolevic, Lenka
Delpino, Trinidad
Saito, Mayuko
Salazar-Lindo, Eduardo
Negron, Eduardo
Montenegro, Sonia
Laguna-Torres, V. Alberto
Maurtua-Neumann, Paola
Datta, Sumona
Evans, Carlton A.
author_facet Oberhelman, Richard A.
Soto-Castellares, Giselle
Gilman, Robert H.
Castillo, Maria E.
Kolevic, Lenka
Delpino, Trinidad
Saito, Mayuko
Salazar-Lindo, Eduardo
Negron, Eduardo
Montenegro, Sonia
Laguna-Torres, V. Alberto
Maurtua-Neumann, Paola
Datta, Sumona
Evans, Carlton A.
author_sort Oberhelman, Richard A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Diagnosing tuberculosis in children is challenging because specimens are difficult to obtain and contain low tuberculosis concentrations, especially with HIV-coinfection. Few studies included well-controls so test specificities are poorly defined. We studied tuberculosis diagnosis in 525 children with and without HIV-infection. METHODS AND FINDINGS: ‘Cases’ were children with suspected pulmonary tuberculosis (n = 209 HIV-negative; n = 81 HIV-positive) and asymptomatic ‘well-control’ children (n = 200 HIV-negative; n = 35 HIV-positive). Specimens (n = 2422) were gastric aspirates, nasopharyngeal aspirates and stools analyzed by a total of 9688 tests. All specimens were tested with an in-house hemi-nested IS6110 PCR that took <24 hours. False-positive PCR in well-controls were more frequent in HIV-infection (P≤0.01): 17% (6/35) HIV-positive well-controls versus 5.5% (11/200) HIV-negative well-controls; caused by 6.7% (7/104) versus 1.8% (11/599) of their specimens, respectively. 6.7% (116/1719) specimens from 25% (72/290) cases were PCR-positive, similar (P>0.2) for HIV-positive versus HIV-negative cases. All specimens were also tested with auramine acid-fast microscopy, microscopic-observation drug-susceptibility (MODS) liquid culture, and Lowenstein-Jensen solid culture that took ≤6 weeks and had 100% specificity (all 2112 tests on 704 specimens from 235 well-controls were negative). Microscopy-positivity was rare (0.21%, 5/2422 specimens) and all microscopy-positive specimens were culture-positive. Culture-positivity was less frequent (P≤0.01) in HIV-infection: 1.2% (1/81) HIV-positive cases versus 11% (22/209) HIV-negative cases; caused by 0.42% (2/481) versus 4.7% (58/1235) of their specimens, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: In HIV-positive children with suspected tuberculosis, diagnostic yield was so low that 1458 microscopy and culture tests were done per case confirmed and even in children with culture-proven tuberculosis most tests and specimens were false-negative; whereas PCR was so prone to false-positives that PCR-positivity was as likely in specimens from well-controls as suspected-tuberculosis cases. This demonstrates the importance of control participants in diagnostic test evaluation and that even extensive laboratory testing only rarely contributed to the care of children with suspected TB. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study did not meet Peruvian and some other international criteria for a clinical trial but was registered with the ClinicalTrials.gov registry: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00054769
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spelling pubmed-44160482015-05-07 A Controlled Study of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected and Uninfected Children in Peru Oberhelman, Richard A. Soto-Castellares, Giselle Gilman, Robert H. Castillo, Maria E. Kolevic, Lenka Delpino, Trinidad Saito, Mayuko Salazar-Lindo, Eduardo Negron, Eduardo Montenegro, Sonia Laguna-Torres, V. Alberto Maurtua-Neumann, Paola Datta, Sumona Evans, Carlton A. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Diagnosing tuberculosis in children is challenging because specimens are difficult to obtain and contain low tuberculosis concentrations, especially with HIV-coinfection. Few studies included well-controls so test specificities are poorly defined. We studied tuberculosis diagnosis in 525 children with and without HIV-infection. METHODS AND FINDINGS: ‘Cases’ were children with suspected pulmonary tuberculosis (n = 209 HIV-negative; n = 81 HIV-positive) and asymptomatic ‘well-control’ children (n = 200 HIV-negative; n = 35 HIV-positive). Specimens (n = 2422) were gastric aspirates, nasopharyngeal aspirates and stools analyzed by a total of 9688 tests. All specimens were tested with an in-house hemi-nested IS6110 PCR that took <24 hours. False-positive PCR in well-controls were more frequent in HIV-infection (P≤0.01): 17% (6/35) HIV-positive well-controls versus 5.5% (11/200) HIV-negative well-controls; caused by 6.7% (7/104) versus 1.8% (11/599) of their specimens, respectively. 6.7% (116/1719) specimens from 25% (72/290) cases were PCR-positive, similar (P>0.2) for HIV-positive versus HIV-negative cases. All specimens were also tested with auramine acid-fast microscopy, microscopic-observation drug-susceptibility (MODS) liquid culture, and Lowenstein-Jensen solid culture that took ≤6 weeks and had 100% specificity (all 2112 tests on 704 specimens from 235 well-controls were negative). Microscopy-positivity was rare (0.21%, 5/2422 specimens) and all microscopy-positive specimens were culture-positive. Culture-positivity was less frequent (P≤0.01) in HIV-infection: 1.2% (1/81) HIV-positive cases versus 11% (22/209) HIV-negative cases; caused by 0.42% (2/481) versus 4.7% (58/1235) of their specimens, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: In HIV-positive children with suspected tuberculosis, diagnostic yield was so low that 1458 microscopy and culture tests were done per case confirmed and even in children with culture-proven tuberculosis most tests and specimens were false-negative; whereas PCR was so prone to false-positives that PCR-positivity was as likely in specimens from well-controls as suspected-tuberculosis cases. This demonstrates the importance of control participants in diagnostic test evaluation and that even extensive laboratory testing only rarely contributed to the care of children with suspected TB. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study did not meet Peruvian and some other international criteria for a clinical trial but was registered with the ClinicalTrials.gov registry: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00054769 Public Library of Science 2015-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4416048/ /pubmed/25927526 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120915 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Oberhelman, Richard A.
Soto-Castellares, Giselle
Gilman, Robert H.
Castillo, Maria E.
Kolevic, Lenka
Delpino, Trinidad
Saito, Mayuko
Salazar-Lindo, Eduardo
Negron, Eduardo
Montenegro, Sonia
Laguna-Torres, V. Alberto
Maurtua-Neumann, Paola
Datta, Sumona
Evans, Carlton A.
A Controlled Study of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected and Uninfected Children in Peru
title A Controlled Study of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected and Uninfected Children in Peru
title_full A Controlled Study of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected and Uninfected Children in Peru
title_fullStr A Controlled Study of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected and Uninfected Children in Peru
title_full_unstemmed A Controlled Study of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected and Uninfected Children in Peru
title_short A Controlled Study of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected and Uninfected Children in Peru
title_sort controlled study of tuberculosis diagnosis in hiv-infected and uninfected children in peru
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4416048/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25927526
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120915
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