Abstract
Fibreoptic bronchoscopy was performed on 190 patients with chest radiographic lesions and negative sputum smears for acid-fast bacilli. Aside from obtaining transbronchial biopsies for histological examination, bronchial aspirate specimens were also tested for Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex DNA by a conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique. Of 177 transbronchial biopsies performed, a diagnosis was found in 64 cases [43 cases of tuberculosis (TB), 17 cases of lung carcinoma and four cases of other infective/inflammatory diseases] giving a diagnostic yield of 36·2%. PCR was positive in 105 of 108 finally diagnosed cases of TB and 22 of 82 non-TB cases. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of PCR when applied to bronchial aspirate specimens for diagnosing smear-negative pulmonary TB were 97·2%, 73·2%, 82·7% and 95·2% respectively. Therefore, detection of M. tuberculosis complex DNA in bronchial aspirates by PCR might have an adjunctive place to transbronchial biopsies in the rapid diagnosis of smear-negative pulmonary tuberculosis.
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