At present, the rapid diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis rests with microscopy. However, this technique is insensitive and many cases of pulmonary tuberculosis cannot be initially confirmed. Nucleic acid amplification techniques are extremely sensitive, but when they are applied to tuberculosis diagnosis, they have given variable results. Investigators at six centers in Europe compared a standardized PCR system (Amplicor; Roche) against conventional culture methods. Defined clinical information was collected. Discrepant samples were retested, and inhibition assays and backup amplification with a separate primer pair were performed. Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex organisms were recovered from 654 (9.1%) of 7,194 samples and 293 (7.8%) of 3,738 patients. Four hundred fifty-two of the M. tuberculosis isolates from 204 patients were smear positive and culture positive. Among the culture-positive specimens, PCR had a sensitivity of 91.4% for smear-positive specimens and 60.9% for smear-negative specimens, with a specificity of 96.1%. Analysis of 254 PCR-positive, culture-negative specimens with discrepant results revealed that 130 were from patients with recently diagnosed tuberculosis and 94 represented a presumed laboratory error. Similar analysis of 118 PCR-negative, culture-positive specimens demonstrated that 27 discrepancies were due to presumed uneven aliquot distribution and 11 were due to presumed laboratory error; PCR inhibitors were detected in 8 specimens. Amplicor enables laboratories with little previous experience with nucleic acid amplification to perform PCR. Disease in more than 60% of the patients with tuberculosis with smear-negative, culture-positive specimens can be diagnosed at the time of admission, and potentially all patients with smear-positive specimens can immediately be confirmed as being infected with M. tuberculosis, leading to improved clinical management.
In the past 5 yr, an increased incidence of tuberculosis has been noted in the United States. Simultaneously, the population infected with human immunodeficiency virus-type I (HIV-I) and the number of cases of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) have increased. Selected areas of the United States have also reported increases in the frequency of drug-resistant isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Because our institution serves a population in which tuberculosis, AIDS, and drug resistant isolates of M. tuberculosis are frequently encountered, we sought to better define interrelationships among these factors by retrospectively reviewing the demographic, clinical, bacteriologic, and radiologic data for all adult patients in whom M. tuberculosis was isolated from a culture of respiratory-tract secretions during a 1-year period (June 1, 1988 to May 31, 1989). Two hundred forty-six patients were thus identified; 66.5% were U.S. born blacks, and 62.6% were 17 to 40 yr of age. Risk factors for HIV infection were present in 106 patients. The overall resistance rate (one or more drugs) = 30.9%, with primary resistance = 22.6% (35 of 155) and secondary resistance = 49.2% (29 of 59). In addition, 12 resistant isolates were found in 32 patients whose prior treatment status was indeterminate. Of the resistant isolates, 56.6% (43 of 76) were multiply resistant. Isoniazid resistance was noted in 90.7% (69 of 76) and rifampin resistance was noted in 50% (38 of 76) of the resistant isolates. No significant differences in the overall frequency of resistance were noted in patients at risk for HIV infection compared with those without these risks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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