There is an urgent need for new tools to improve our ability to diagnose tuberculosis (TB) and multidrugresistant TB (MDR-TB) in resource-poor settings. In a retrospective analysis undertaken in a region with a high incidence of TB, we evaluated the performance of the microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay (MODS), a novel assay developed in Perú which uses an inverted light microscope and culture in Middlebrook 7H9 broth to detect mycobacterial growth. MODS detected 94.0% of 1,908 positive sputum cultures, whereas Löwenstein-Jensen (LJ) culture detected only 86.9% (P < 0.001). The median time to culture positivity was 8 days (compared to 16 days for the same 208 samples by LJ culture; P < 0.001, Wilcoxon signed rank test). The results obtained by direct susceptibility testing using MODS demonstrated excellent concordance for isoniazid and rifampin and the detection of multidrug resistance with those obtained by indirect colorimetric methods: the microplate Alamar Blue assay (MABA) and the tetrazolium microplate assay (TEMA) (agreement, 95, 98, and 94%; kappa values, 0.8, 0.7, and 0.7, respectively). The concordance of the susceptibility testing results for ethambutol and streptomycin was poor. MODS is a novel assay which can detect the organisms responsible for TB and MDR-TB directly from sputum inexpensively, rapidly, and effectively. A comprehensive prospective evaluation of MODS is under way in Perú, and independent validation in nonresearch laboratories should be undertaken at the earliest opportunity.Every single day at least 6,000 people die of tuberculosis (TB), a curable respiratory disease. The diagnosis of TB by sputum smear microscopy is an integral feature of the World Health Organization DOTS (direct observation of treatmentshort-course chemotherapy) strategy for global TB control (25). Low cost, simplicity, and inherent detection of the most infectious cases are the three principal advantages of microscopy for acid-fast bacilli. However, the sensitivity of microscopy for the detection of all cases is low, even when the optimum sensitivity of microscopy is achieved (approximately half of all culture-positive cases are smear negative), and the performance of microscopy is highly variable. Furthermore, the contribution of transmission of infection by smear-negative culture-positive patients (which, by definition, pass undetected when the sole mode of diagnosis is sputum smear) is not inconsiderable (2), and the potential impact of the detection and treatment of these patients is significant (19). Moreover, in this era of emerging drug resistance (9), the lack of information on drug susceptibility threatens the continuing role of the sputum smear as the sole tool for the diagnosis of the majority of cases of TB worldwide. The development of new, low-cost diagnostic tools offers the possibility of future TB control on the basis of culture-based diagnosis and more widespread, targeted susceptibility testing.The simple microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay (MODS) (5), developed in o...
A link between acute infections and the development of acute coronary syndromes (ACS) has been proposed. We used retrospective cohort and self-controlled case series analyses to define the closeness of the association between acute bacterial pneumonia due to Streptococcus pneumoniae or Haemophilus influenzae and ACS. For the retrospective cohort analysis we included a control group of patients with admission diagnoses other than pneumonia or ACS. For the self-controlled case series analysis, we made within-person comparisons of the risk for ACS during the 15 days after admission for pneumonia with that of 365 days before and after that event. In 206 pneumonia patients (144 S. pneumoniae, 62 H. influenzae) we identified 22 (10.7%) cases of ACS, which compared to 6 (1.5%) among 395 controls resulted in an odds ratio (OR) of 7.8 (95% confidence interval [CI], 3.1-19.4). With multivariate logistic regression analysis, the OR for ACS in the pneumonia group remained elevated (OR, 8.5; 95% CI, 3.4-22.2). By the self-controlled case series method, the risk of ACS remarkably increased during the first 15 days after the diagnosis of pneumonia (incidence rate ratio, 47.6; 95% CI, 24.5-92.5). The characteristics and strength of these associations suggest a causal role for the acute infection in this relationship.
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