Clinical Utility of an Amplification Test Based on Ligase Chain Reaction in Pulmonary Tuberculosis
- 1 October 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 158 (4) , 1096-1101
- https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm.158.4.9801112
Abstract
We evaluated the sensitivity and specificity of a new semiautomated direct amplification test (DAT), the LCx-MTB, for the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) and assessed its positive predictive value by focusing on patients with high clinical and radiologic suspicion of pulmonary TB. Respiratory tract specimens from 32 consecutive patients with high suspicion of active pulmonary TB (case patients) and from 204 control patients were cultured for Mycobacterium tuberculosis and tested by LCx-MTB. Sensitivity and specificity of LCx-MTB when compared with culture was, respectively, 80 and 98%. Pulmonary TB was confirmed in the 32 case patients without knowledge of the LCx results: 18 patients were smear- and culture-positive for M. tuberculosis, and all gave at least one specimen that was LCx-positive. Eight patients were smear-negative culture-positive, and seven gave at least one LCx-positive specimen. LCx-MTB was negative in all the specimens obtained from six patients with smear- and culture-negative TB. A positive LCx-MTB result in a smear negative specimen was 100% predictive that at least one of the case patients' specimens would yield M. tuberculosis. As a consequence, knowledge of the LCx-MTB results at the time of specimen collection could have hastened the start of the antituberculosis therapy in three (21%) smear-negative case patients and could have avoided unnecessary invasive diagnostic procedures in four (29%). We conclude that the sensitivity of LCx-MTB in detecting M. tuberculosis DNA in respiratory tract specimens is similar to other DATs, that LCx-MTB is a reliable test for confirmation of TB in smear-positive patients and that LCx-MTB could be beneficial as a diagnostic step in smear-negative patients with a high suspicion of pulmonary TB.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Molecular diagnosis of tuberculosis: current clinical validity and future perspectivesEuropean Respiratory Journal, 1997
- Rapid diagnostic tests for tuberculosis: what is the appropriate use? American Thoracic Society Workshop.American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 1997
- Relevance of nucleic acid amplification techniques for diagnosis of respiratory tract infections in the clinical laboratoryClinical Microbiology Reviews, 1997
- Clinical efficacy of the amplified Mycobacterium tuberculosis direct test for the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis.American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 1996
- Clinical utility of a commercial test based on the polymerase chain reaction for detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis in respiratory specimens.American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 1995
- Epidémiologie de la tuberculose en France en 1994Medecine Et Maladies Infectieuses, 1995
- Ligation amplification and fluorescence detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNAMolecular and Cellular Probes, 1993
- Comparison of polymerase chain reaction amplification of two mycobacterial DNA sequences, IS6110 and the 65kDa antigen gene, in the diagnosis of tuberculosis.Thorax, 1992
- Diagnostic Standards and Classification of TuberculosisAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1990