Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Sep 2021)

Early Evaluation of an Ultra-Portable X-ray System for Tuberculosis Active Case Finding

  • Luan Nguyen Quang Vo,
  • Andrew Codlin,
  • Thuc Doan Ngo,
  • Thang Phuoc Dao,
  • Thuy Thi Thu Dong,
  • Huong Thi Lan Mo,
  • Rachel Forse,
  • Thao Thanh Nguyen,
  • Cong Van Cung,
  • Hoa Binh Nguyen,
  • Nhung Viet Nguyen,
  • Van Van Nguyen,
  • Ngan Thi Tran,
  • Giang Hoai Nguyen,
  • Zhi Zhen Qin,
  • Jacob Creswell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed6030163
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
p. 163

Abstract

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X-ray screening is an important tool in tuberculosis (TB) prevention and care, but access has historically been restricted by its immobile nature. As recent advancements have improved the portability of modern X-ray systems, this study represents an early evaluation of the safety, image quality and yield of using an ultra-portable X-ray system for active case finding (ACF). We reported operational and radiological performance characteristics and compared image quality between the ultra-portable and two reference systems. Image quality was rated by three human readers and by an artificial intelligence (AI) software. We deployed the ultra-portable X-ray alongside the reference system for community-based ACF and described TB care cascades for each system. The ultra-portable system operated within advertised specifications and radiologic tolerances, except on X-ray capture capacity, which was 58% lower than the reported maximum of 100 exposures per charge. The mean image quality rating from radiologists for the ultra-portable system was significantly lower than the reference (3.71 vs. 3.99, p p = 0.571), nor in any of the steps along the TB care cascade during our ACF campaign. Despite some shortcomings, ultra-portable X-ray systems have significant potential to improve case detection and equitable access to high-quality TB care.

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