Rats sniff out pulmonary tuberculosis from sputum: a diagnostic accuracy meta-analysis

Author:

Kanaan Reem,Farkas Nelli,Hegyi Péter,Soós Alexandra,Hegyi Dávid,Németh Katalin,Horváth Orsolya,Tenk Judit,Mikó Alexandra,Szentesi Andrea,Balaskó Márta,Szakács Zsolt,Vasas Andrea,Csupor Dezső,Gyöngyi Zoltán

Abstract

AbstractIn Sub-Saharan Africa, African giant pouched rats (Cricetomys gambianus) are trained to identify TB patients by smelling sputum. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of the data to see if this novel method is comparable to traditional laboratory screening and detection methods like Ziehl–Neelsen stain-based assays (ZN) and bacterial culture. The search and data processing strategy is registered at PROSPERO (CRD42019123629). Medline via PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library databases were systematically searched for the keywords “pouched rat” and “tuberculosis”. Data from 53,181 samples obtained from 24,600 patients were extracted from seven studies. Using sample-wise detection, the sensitivity of the studies was 86.7% [95% CI 80.4–91.2%], while the specificity was 88.4% [95% CI 79.7–93.7%]. For patient-wise detection, the sensitivity was 81.3% [95% CI 64.0–91.4%], while the specificity was 73.4% [95% CI 62.8–81.9%]. Good and excellent classification was assessed by hierarchical summary receiver-operating characteristic analysis for patient-wise and sample-wise detections, respectively. Our study is the first systematic review and meta-analysis of the above relatively inexpensive and rapid screening method. The results indicate that African giant pouched rats can discriminate healthy controls from TB individuals by sniffing sputum with even a higher accuracy than a single ZN screening.

Funder

European Union

Development of Scientific Workshops of Medical, Health Sciences and Pharmaceutical Educations

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference38 articles.

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