A clinical scoring system to prioritise investigation for tuberculosis among adults attending HIV clinics in South Africa

Hanifa, Yasmeen and Fielding, Katherine L and Chihota, Violet N and Adonis, Lungiswa and Charalambous, Salome and Foster, Nicola and Karstaedt, Alan and McCarthy, Kerrigan and Nicol, Mark P and Ndlovu, Nontobeko T (2017) A clinical scoring system to prioritise investigation for tuberculosis among adults attending HIV clinics in South Africa. PLoS ONE, 12 (8): e0181519. ISSN 1932-6203

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Abstract

BackgroundThe World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation for regular tuberculosis (TB) screening of HIV-positive individuals with Xpert MTB/RIF as the first diagnostic test has major resource implications.ObjectiveTo develop a diagnostic prediction model for TB, for symptomatic adults attending for routine HIV care, to prioritise TB investigation.DesignCohort study exploring a TB testing algorithm.SettingHIV clinics, South Africa.ParticipantsRepresentative sample of adult HIV clinic attendees; data from participants reporting ≥1 symptom on the WHO screening tool were split 50:50 to derive, then internally validate, a prediction model.OutcomeTB, defined as “confirmed” if Xpert MTB/RIF, line probe assay or M. tuberculosis culture were positive; and “clinical” if TB treatment started without microbiological confirmation, within six months of enrolment.ResultsOverall, 79/2602 (3.0%) participants on ART fulfilled TB case definitions, compared to 65/906 (7.2%) pre-ART. Among 1133/3508 (32.3%) participants screening positive on the WHO tool, 1048 met inclusion criteria for this analysis: 52/515 (10.1%) in the derivation and 58/533 (10.9%) in the validation dataset had TB. Our final model comprised ART status (on ART > 3 months vs. pre-ART or ART < 3 months); body mass index (continuous); CD4 (continuous); number of WHO symptoms (1 vs. >1 symptom). We converted this to a clinical score, using clinically-relevant CD4 and BMI categories. A cut-off score of ≥3 identified those with TB with sensitivity and specificity of 91.8% and 34.3% respectively. If investigation was prioritised for individuals with score of ≥3, 68% (717/1048) symptomatic individuals would be tested, among whom the prevalence of TB would be 14.1% (101/717); 32% (331/1048) of tests would be avoided, but 3% (9/331) with TB would be missed amongst those not tested.ConclusionOur clinical score may help prioritise TB investigation among symptomatic individuals.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
PLoS ONE
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1100
Subjects:
?? agricultural and biological sciences(all)biochemistry, genetics and molecular biology(all)medicine(all) ??
ID Code:
136962
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
24 Sep 2019 15:10
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
28 Nov 2023 11:32