TB
Diagnosis Boosted by Faster, Cheaper Test
A method for
diagnosing tuberculosis (TB) that harnesses technology used
in airport security could lead to more reliable screening.
The South Africa-developed system, TBDx,
takes digital 'pictures' of patients' sputum samples and looks
for TB's structural 'fingerprint' in the same way that
airport scanners can identify types of explosives.
The TBDx system can diagnose TB within
24 hours. It requires little manual microscopy work, so special
skills are not required to operate it. TBDx can operate 24
hours a day.
It can take conventional TB microscopy
of fresh sputum from the lungs, or of samples cultured
in the laboratory days or weeks to make a diagnosis.
The system developed by the Aurum
Institute, South Africa's National Health Laboratory Services
and imaging company Guardian Technologies International
has been tested over the past 12 months and is due to be trialled
in its fully-automated mode in the next few months.
TBDx is at least ten per cent more accurate
at identifying TB bacteria than conventional testing, David
Clark, deputy chief of the Aurum Institute, told SciDev.Net.
Clark said the system could be useful
for pre-screening samples to determine which need further
analysis, for example it could identify the species of TB
bacteria causing the disease.
He added that affordability is another
benefit. "There are other new technologies which are
a lot more sensitive and accurate but they are very expensive.
TBDx diagnoses TB using relatively low-cost microscopy but
improves things by making the process more efficient and effective,"
he said.
The more expensive machines have not yet
been applied in TB diagnostics, Willem Sturm, dean at the
Nelson Mandela School of Medicine and interim director of
the KwaZulu-Natal Research Institute for Tuberculosis and
HIV, told SciDev.Net.
He said that while TBDx will be helpful,
microscopy remains too insensitive to accurately diagnose
TB, even if the machine can identify a higher percentage of
cases than can the human eye.
Paul van Helden, professor of medical
biochemistry at South Africa's University of Stellenbosch,
said the system offers hope if it can address the issues of
insensitivity and slowness in TB diagnosis.
"[The system] merits attention but
will probably not be able to solve all diagnostic problems
for example, testing for TB drug-resistance, which
occurs in parts of the body other than the lungs," said
van Helden.
Clark said that if further testing
goes well, the system could be on the market later this year.
The price is expected to be comparable to conventional microscopy
without the added expense of staff.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 11 January, 2010

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