Abstract

Symptom screening is a recommended component of intensified case-finding (ICF) for pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) among HIV-infected individuals. Symptomatic individuals are further investigated to either exclude or diagnose pulmonary TB, thus reducing the number of individuals requiring costly laboratory investigation. Those with laboratory evaluations negative for pulmonary TB or who lack symptoms may be eligible for antiretroviral therapy (ART) and/or TB isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT). A four-part symptom screen has been recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) for identifying TB suspects and those unlikely to have TB. A meta-analysis of studies among HIV-infected individuals calculated a sensitivity of 90.1% for the four-part symptoms screen - of any of cough, fever, night sweats, or weight loss - among patients in clinical care, making it an effective tool for identifying most patients with TB. An important population for intensified case-finding not included in that meta-analysis was HIV-infected pregnant women. We undertook a cross-sectional survey among HIV-infected pregnant women receiving prenatal care at community clinics in South Africa. We obtained a four-symptom review and sputum smear microscopy and mycobacterial culture on all participants. Among 1415 women, 226 (16%) had a positive symptom screen, and 35 (2.5%) were newly diagnosed with culture-positive TB. Twelve were on TB treatment at the time of screening, yielding 47 (3.3%) women with prevalent TB. Symptom screening among women without known TB had a sensitivity of 28% and specificity of 84%. The poor performance of symptom screening to identify women with TB suggests that other approaches may be needed for intensified case-finding to be effective for this population.

Highlights

  • Symptom screening is the first step in the World Health Organization (WHO)-recommended tuberculosis (TB) intensified case-finding (ICF) algorithm for people living with HIV

  • Multiple studies have evaluated the sensitivity of symptoms for identifying TB among HIV-infected individuals. Nine of these studies provided patient-level data on 8,148 patients with 495 TB diagnoses for a meta-analysis that calculated a combined sensitivity of 79% and specificity of 50% when using a four-part symptom screen of any of cough, fever, night sweats, or weight loss [1]

  • We found a high prevalence of TB (3.3%) among HIV-infected pregnant women in South Africa

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Summary

Introduction

Symptom screening is the first step in the World Health Organization (WHO)-recommended tuberculosis (TB) intensified case-finding (ICF) algorithm for people living with HIV. Multiple studies have evaluated the sensitivity of symptoms for identifying TB among HIV-infected individuals. Nine of these studies provided patient-level data on 8,148 patients with 495 TB diagnoses for a meta-analysis that calculated a combined sensitivity of 79% (the sensitivity was 90.1% when limiting the analysis to participants already in clinical care) and specificity of 50% when using a four-part symptom screen of any of cough, fever, night sweats, or weight loss [1]. Symptom screening is useful for identifying individuals with heightened likelihood of having TB to focus laboratory testing. Subsequent to the publication of the WHO guidelines, a study of pregnant women from India suggested low sensitivity of the four-part symptom screen when used alone [11].

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