Speeding up the diagnosis of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in a high-burden region with the use of a commercial line probe assay
Angela Pires Brandão, Juliana Maíra Watanabe Pinhata, Rosângela Siqueira de Oliveira, Vera Maria Neder Galesi, Hélio Caiaffa-Filho, Lucilaine Ferrazoli
Jornal Brasileiro de Pneumologia · 2019-01
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the rapid diagnosis of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, by using a commercial line probe assay for rifampicin and isoniazid detection (LPA-plus), in the routine workflow of a tuberculosis reference laboratory. METHODS: The LPA-plus was prospectively evaluated on 341 isolates concurrently submitted to the automated liquid drug susceptibility testing system. RESULTS: Among 303 phenotypically valid results, none was genotypically rifampicin false-susceptible (13/13; 100% sensitivity). Two rifampicin-susceptible isolates harboured rpoB mutations (288/290; 99.3% specificity) which, however, were non-resistance-conferring mutations. LPA-plus missed three isoniazid-resistant isolates (23/26; 88.5% sensitivity) and detected all isoniazid-susceptible isolates (277/277; 100% specificity). Among the 38 (11%) invalid phenotypic results, LPA-plus identified 31 rifampicin- and isoniazid-susceptible isolates, one isoniazid-resistant and six as non-Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. CONCLUSIONS: LPA-plus showed excellent agreement (≥91%) and accuracy (≥99%). Implementing LPA-plus in our setting can speed up the diagnosis of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, yield a significantly higher number of valid results than phenotypic drug susceptibility testing and provide further information on the drug-resistance level.
MeSH terms
- Isoniazid
- Rifampicin
- rpoB
- Tuberculosis
- Medicine
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Drug resistance
- Multiple drug resistance
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex
- Microbiology
- Virology