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Publication

Rapid Diagnosis of XDR and Pre-XDR TB: A Systematic Review of Available Tools


Authors:

  • Saderi, Laura
  • Puci, Mariangela
  • Di Lorenzo, Biagio
  • Centis, Rosella
  • D’Ambrosio, Lia
  • Akkerman, Onno W.
  • Alffenaar, Jan-Willem C.
  • Caminero, José A.
  • Chakaya, Jeremiah Muhwa
  • Denholm, Justin T.
  • Kurhasani, Xhevat
  • Ong, Catherine W.M.
  • Rendon, Adrian
  • Silva, Denise Rossato
  • Tiberi, Simon
  • Zenner, Dominik
  • Cabibbe, Andrea M.
  • Migliori, Giovanni Battista
  • Sotgiu, Giovanni

Details:

Archivos de Bronconeumología, Volume 58, Issue 12, 2022-12-31

Article Link: Click here

Introduction No previous systematic reviews have comprehensively investigated the features of Xpert MTB/XDR and other rapid tests to diagnose pre-XDR/XDR-TB. The aim of this systematic review is to assess existing rapid diagnostics for pre-XDR/XDR-TB from a point-of-care perspective and describe their technical characteristics (i.e., sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values). Methods Embase, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science were searched to detect the articles focused on the accuracy of commercially available rapid molecular diagnostic tests for XDR-TB according to PRISMA guidelines. The analysis compared the diagnostic techniques and approaches in terms of sensitivity, specificity, laboratory complexity, time to confirmed diagnosis. Results Of 1298 records identified, after valuating article titles and abstracts, 97 (7.5%) records underwent full-text evaluation and 38 records met the inclusion criteria. Two rapid World Health Organization (WHO)-endorsed tests are available: Xpert MTB/XDR and GenoType MTBDRsl (VER1.0 and VER 2.0). Both tests had similar performance, slightly favouring Xpert, although only 2 studies were available (sensitivity 91.4–94; specificity 98.5–99; accuracy 97.2–97.7; PPV 88.9–99.1; NPV 95.8–98.9). Conclusions Xpert MTB/XDR could be suggested at near-point-of-care settings to be used primarily as a follow-on test for laboratory-confirmed TB, complementing existing rapid tests detecting at least rifampicin-resistance. Both Xpert MTB/XDR and GenoType MTBDRsl are presently diagnosing what WHO defined, in 2021, as pre-XDR-TB.