Scientific Reports (Jul 2022)

Nucleic acid amplification tests reduce delayed diagnosis and misdiagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis

  • Jia-Yih Feng,
  • Chou-Jui Lin,
  • Jann-Yuan Wang,
  • Shun-Tien Chien,
  • Chih-Bin Lin,
  • Wei-Chang Huang,
  • Chih-Hsin Lee,
  • Chin-Chung Shu,
  • Ming-Chih Yu,
  • Jen-Jyh Lee,
  • Chen-Yuan Chiang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-16319-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The clinical impact of nucleic acid amplification (NAA) tests on reducing delayed diagnosis and misdiagnosis of pulmonary TB (PTB) has rarely been investigated. PTB patients were classified into a frontline NAA group, an add-on NAA group, and a no NAA group. The outcomes of interest were the proportion of PTB case died before anti-TB treatment, the interval between sputum examination and initiation of treatment, and misdiagnosis of PTB. A total of 2192 PTB patients were enrolled, including 282 with frontline NAA, 717 with add-on NAA, and 1193 with no NAA tests. Patients with NAA tests had a lower death rate before treatment initiation compared to those without NAA tests (1.6% vs. 4.4%, p < 0.001) in all cases. Patients with frontline NAA compared to those with add-on NAA and those without NAA, had a shorter interval between sputum examination and treatment initiation in all cases (3 days vs. 6 days (p < 0.001), vs 18 days (p < 0.001)), and less misdiagnosis in smear-positive cases (1.8% vs. 5.6% (p = 0.039), vs 6.5% (p = 0.026)). In conclusion, NAA tests help prevent death before treatment initiation. Frontline NAA tests perform better than add-on NAA and no NAA in avoiding treatment delay in all cases, and misdiagnosis of PTB in smear-positive cases.