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Oxford University Press, Open Forum Infectious Diseases, 2(8), 2020

DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofaa639

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Urine Lipoarabinomannan Testing for All HIV Patients Hospitalized in Medical Wards Identifies a Large Proportion of Patients With Tuberculosis at Risk of Death

This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Abstract Background Diagnosing tuberculosis (TB), the leading cause of death in people with HIV, remains a challenge in resource-limited countries. We assessed TB diagnosis using a strategy that included systematic urine lipoarabinomannan (LAM) testing for all HIV patients hospitalized in medical wards and 6-month mortality according to LAM results. Methods This prospective, observational study included adult HIV patients hospitalized in the medical wards of a public district hospital in Malawi regardless of their TB symptoms or CD4 count. Each patient had a clinical examination, and Alere Determine TB-LAM, sputum microscopy, sputum GeneXpert MTB/RIF (Xpert), chest x-ray, and CD4 count were systematically requested. Results Among 387 inpatients, 54% had a CD4 <200 cells/µL, 64% had presumptive TB, and 90% had ≥1 TB symptom recorded in their medical file. LAM results were available for 99.0% of patients, microscopy for 62.8%, and Xpert for 60.7%. In total, 26.1% (100/383) had LAM-positive results, 48% (48/100) of which were grades 2–4. Any TB laboratory test result was positive in 30.8% (119/387). Among patients with no Xpert result, 28.5% (43/151) were LAM-positive. Cumulative 6-month mortality was 40.1% (151/377): 50.5% (49/97) in LAM-positives and 36.2% (100/276) in LAM-negatives (P = .013). In multivariable regression analyses, LAM-positive patients had a higher risk of mortality than LAM-negatives (adjusted odds ratio, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.1–5.8; P = .037). Conclusions In resource-limited hospital medical wards with high TB prevalence, a diagnostic strategy including systematic urine LAM testing for all HIV patients is an easily implementable strategy that identifies a large proportion of patients with TB at risk of death.