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Performance of Xpert Ultra nasopharyngeal swab for identification of tuberculosis deaths in northern Tanzania

Authors :
Cristina Costales
John A. Crump
Alex R. Mremi
Patrick T. Amsi
Nathaniel H. Kalengo
Kajiru G. Kilonzo
Grace Kinabo
Bingileki F. Lwezaula
Furaha Lyamuya
Annette Marandu
Ronald Mbwasi
Blandina T. Mmbaga
Calvin Mosha
Manuela Carugati
Deng B. Madut
Ann M. Nelson
Michael J. Maze
Eduard Matkovic
Sherif R. Zaki
Venance P. Maro
Matthew P. Rubach
Source :
Clinical Microbiology and Infection. 28:1150.e1-1150.e6
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Numerous tuberculosis (TB) deaths remain undetected in low-resource endemic settings. With autopsy-confirmed tuberculosis as our standard, we assessed the diagnostic performance of Xpert MTB/RIF Ultra (Ultra; Cepheid) on nasopharyngeal specimens collected postmortem.From October 2016 through May 2019, we enrolled pediatric and adult medical deaths to a prospective autopsy study at two referral hospitals in northern Tanzania with next-of-kin authorization. We swabbed the posterior nasopharynx prior to autopsy and tested the samples later by Ultra. At autopsy we collected lung, liver, and, when possible, cerebrospinal fluid for mycobacterial culture and histopathology. Confirmed tuberculosis was defined as Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex recovery by culture with consistent tissue histopathology findings; decedents with only histopathology findings, including acid-fast staining or immunohistochemistry, were defined as probable tuberculosis.Of 205 decedents, 78 (38.0%) were female and median (range) age was 45 (0,96) years. Twenty-seven (13.2%) were found to have tuberculosis at autopsy, 22 (81.5%) confirmed and 5 (18.5%) probable. Ultra detected M. tuberculosis complex from the nasopharynx in 21 (77.8%) of 27 TB cases (sensitivity 70.4% [95% confidence interval {CI} 49.8-86.2%], specificity 98.9% [95% CI 96.0-99.9%]). Among confirmed TB, the sensitivity increased to 81.8% (95% CI 59.7-94.8%). Tuberculosis was not included as a death certificate diagnosis in 14 (66.7%) of the 21 MTBc detections by Ultra.Nasopharyngeal Ultra was highly specific for identifying in-hospital tuberculosis deaths, including unsuspected tuberculosis deaths. This approach may improve tuberculosis death enumeration in high-burden countries.

Details

ISSN :
1198743X
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Microbiology and Infection
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd4edfe3446683c300ee5e0f28ee6e80