Light emitting diode fluorescence microscopy increased detection of smear-positives during follow-up of tuberculosis patients in India

This study examines programme implications

Abstract

Background

In India, since July 2012, at designated Microscopy Centers (DMCs) in 200 medical colleges, sputum smear examination for tuberculosis bacilli changed from Ziehl Neelsen (ZN) method to auramine based Light Emitting Diode Fluorescent Microscopy (LED-FM) method. We assessed the additional yield of smear positives among patients undergoing follow-up sputum examination during TB treatment before and after deploying LED-FM.

Methods

This was a before and after comparison study in eight conveniently selected medical college DMCs across North India. We extracted data from TB laboratory registers on number of TB patients examined for follow-up and their smear microscopy results including the grades by ZN (before; July鈥揇ecember 2011) and LED-FM (after; July鈥揇ecember 2012) and compared them.

Results

Altogether, 2868 TB patients were examined by LED-FM and 2740 were examined by ZN during follow-up. LED-FM increased the proportion of follow-up smear positives from 5.0 % (n = 136) to 7.4 % (n = 213) with an additional yield of 77 follow-up smear-positives鈥攚ith the highest increase in smears graded scanty (2.6 vs 1.2 %) (p value <0.05).

Conclusions

Since all smear positives during follow-up are considered 鈥榩resumptive multidrug resistant (MDR)-TB patients鈥� in India, introduction of LED-FM would result in additional number of patients eligible for MDR-TB testing, which would have otherwise been missed by ZN.

This research was supported by the UK Department for International Development鈥檚 Operational Research Capacity Building Programme led by the International Union Against TB and Lung Disease (The Union)

Citation

Badri Thapa , Lord Wasim Reza, Ajay MV Kumar, Ashish Pandey, Srinath Satyanarayana and Sarabjit Chadha (2015) Light emitting diode fluorescence microscopy increased detection of smear-positives during follow-up of tuberculosis patients in India: program implications.BMC Research Notes 2015 8:596 https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-015-1584-z

Updates to this page

Published 25 November 2017