Performance of Tuberculosis Molecular Bacterial Load Assay Compared to Alere TB-LAM in Urine of Pulmonary Tuberculosis Patients with HIV Co-Infections

Author:

Mapamba Daniel Adon12ORCID,Sauli Elingarami2,Lalashowi Julieth1,Buza Joram2,John Joseph1,Mwaisango Zawadi1,Tarmo Peter1,Sabi Issa1,Rachow Andrea34,Ntinginya Nyanda Elias1,Mtafya Bariki1

Affiliation:

1. National Institute for Medical Research—Mbeya Medical Research Centre (NIM-MMRC), Mbeya P.O. Box 2410, Tanzania

2. The Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science and Technology, Arusha P.O. Box 447, Tanzania

3. Division of Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine, Medical Centre of the University of Munich (LMU), 80802 Munich, Germany

4. German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Partner Site Munich, 81675 Munich, Germany

Abstract

Alternative tools are needed to improve the detection of M. tuberculosis (M. tb) in HIV co-infections. We evaluated the utility of Tuberculosis Molecular Bacterial Load Assay (TB-MBLA) compared to lipoarabinomannan (LAM) to detect M. tb in urine. Sputum Xpert MTB/RIF-positive patients were consented to provide urine at baseline, weeks 2, 8, 16, and 24 of treatment for TB-MBLA, culture, and LAM. Results were compared with sputum cultures and microscopy. Initial M. tb. H37Rv spiking experiments were performed to validate the tests. A total of 63 urine samples from 47 patients were analyzed. The median age (IQR) was 38 (30–41) years; 25 (53.2%) were male, 3 (6.5%) had urine for all visits, 45 (95.7%) were HIV positive, of whom 18 (40%) had CD4 cell counts below 200 cells/µL, and 33 (73.3%) were on ART at enrollment. Overall urine LAM positivity was 14.3% compared to 4.8% with TB-MBLA. Culture and microscopy of their sputum counterparts were positive in 20.6% and 12.7% of patients, respectively. Of the three patients with urine and sputum at baseline, one (33.33%) had urine TB-MBLA and LAM positive compared to 100% with sputum MGIT culture positive. Spearman’s rank correction coefficient (r) between TB-MBLA and MGIT was −0.85 and 0.89 with a solid culture, p > 0.05. TB-MBLA has the promising potential to improve M. tb detection in urine of HIV-co-infected patients and complement current TB diagnostics.

Funder

German Ministry of Education and Research

National Institute for Medical Research-Mbeya Medical Research Centre Seed Grant

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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