Abstract

This study evaluated the performance of an in-house nested-PCR system for the detection of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex in pleural fluid, blood and urine samples from pleural effusion tuberculosis patients by health services physicians in Pernambuco, Brazil. A prospective double-blind study with 37 hospitalized patients of both sexes, aged over 15, was used to investigate the diagnosis of pleural effusion. The criteria used to define the cases included the demonstration of bacillus in biological samples by smear or culture or by a granulomatous finding in the histopathological examination, associated with an evident response to specific treatments to each clinical situation. Pleural fluid, blood and urine samples were collected and subjected to routine tests and the nested PCR technique to assess for M. tuberculosis amplification. In total, 37 pleural effusion patients took part in the study, of whom 19 (51.3%) had tubercular etiologies and 18 (48.7%) had etiologies from other causes. When the pleural fluid, blood and/or urine sample in-house nested-PCR sensitivities were evaluated simultaneously, the results were positive regardless of the biological specimen (the sensitivity was 84.2%); however, when the blood and/or urine samples were analyzed together, the sensitivity was 72.2%. When the pleural fluid samples were evaluated alone, the sensitivity was only 33.3%. The performance of the diagnostic pleural tuberculosis nested-PCR was directly related to the diversity of the samples collected from the same patient. Additionally, this study may identify a need to prioritize non-invasive blood and urine collection for this diagnosis.

Highlights

  • This study evaluated the performance of an in-house nested-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) system for the detection of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex in pleural fluid, blood and urine samples from pleural effusion tuberculosis patients by health services physicians in Pernambuco, Brazil

  • The aims of this study were to evaluate the performance of the nested in-house PCR technique for detection of IS6110 M. tuberculosis in clinical samples collected from patients with suspected pleural TB, referred by Northeast Brazil public health services, and to analyze the importance of the test in diagnosis of the disease

  • A prospective, double-blinded study was conducted with 37 patients of both sexes over 15 years of age who were hospitalized for pleural effusion diagnosis investigations in public health facilities, either outsourced or from TB referral centers, in the State of Pernambuco, Northeast Brazil between August 2007 and August 2008

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Summary

Introduction

This study evaluated the performance of an in-house nested-PCR system for the detection of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex in pleural fluid, blood and urine samples from pleural effusion tuberculosis patients by health services physicians in Pernambuco, Brazil. Blood and urine samples were collected and subjected to routine tests and the nested PCR technique to assess for M. tuberculosis amplification. Conclusions: The performance of the diagnostic pleural tuberculosis nested-PCR was directly related to the diversity of the samples collected from the same patient. 531 of these new cases occurred in the State of Pernambuco[2] These figures are much lower than the WHO estimates and are evidence of diagnostic deficiencies, under-notifications and the inefficiency of disease control programs, especially regarding the extrapulmonary form of TB3. While the extrapulmonary TB distribution in the country is uneven, most reported cases are mainly concentrated in the Southeast and Northeast[4]

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