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    Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2010 Apr;14(4):482-8.

    Diagnostic accuracy of the microscopic observation drug susceptibility assay: a pilot study from India.

    Source

    Department of Microbiology, Christian Medical College, Vellore, Tamil Nadu, India. joysarojini@hotmail.com

    Abstract

    SETTING:

    The microscopic observation drug susceptibility (MODS) assay is a rapid, sensitive, low-cost liquid culture technique.

    OBJECTIVE:

    To establish the accuracy of MODS for the detection of active pulmonary tuberculosis (TB), and to document the costs and challenges of setting up this assay in a low-income setting.

    DESIGN:

    Prospective blinded pilot study of 200 adult TB suspects at a tertiary referral hospital in India. Reference standard included culture (Löwenstein-Jensen and automated liquid culture) and clinical diagnosis.

    RESULTS:

    Patients were mostly male (n = 122, 61.1%) and out-patients (n = 184, 92.0%), with a mean age of 40.4 years (standard deviation 16.2). Seventeen (8.5%) were human immunodeficiency virus infected and 47 (23.5%) were reference culture-positive. Compared to reference culture, MODS was 78.9% sensitive (95%CI 62.2-90.0) and 96.7% specific (95%CI 92.0-98.8). Clinical assessment suggested that MODS was false-negative in 3/8 reference culture-positive MODS-negatives and true-positive in 4/6 reference culture-negative MODS-positives. MODS was faster than solid (P < 0.001) and liquid culture (P = 0.088), and cheaper than both.

    CONCLUSION:

    MODS may be a good alternative to automated liquid culture, but there were several challenges in setting up the assay. Prior training and validation, setup costs and inability to rule out cross-contamination need to be taken into account before the test can be established.

    PMID:
    20202307
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC2951990
    Free PMC Article

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