Abstract
BackgroundThe diagnosis of extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPTB) shows numerous difficulties because of non-specific symptomatology and low sensitivity of conventional methods. Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is a fast and low-cost technique, which can amplify under isothermal conditions an amount of target DNA copies into approximately a billion copies. ObjectiveThe present study aimed to evaluate a IS6110-LAMP system for Mycobacterium tuberculosis detection in blood and urine samples from patients with EPTB. MethodsThe collected samples (n = 122) were stratified in two groups: Group EPTB – patient samples with confirmed EPTB (n = 61); Group non-TB – patient samples without TB (n = 61). The urine samples underwent decontamination, and the components of blood samples were separated (plasma and PBMC). DNA extractions were performed in all biological samples followed by IS6110-LAMP assay technique. The detection limit was evaluated through dilution curves (1:10) using Mtb reference strain (H37Rv) genomic DNA. FindingsThe detection limit of IS6110-LAMP was 10 fg/μL (∼10–20 bacilli/μL). The IS6110-LAMP technique sensitivity and specificity were 95.65 % and 79.25 %, respectively, with a general kappa agreement index of 0.762. Main conclusionsBased on these results, IS6110-LAMP test showed considerable diagnostic parameters, being able to aid in the speed and accuracy of the final EPTB diagnosis.
Published Version
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