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Drug-resistant tuberculosis diagnosis since Xpert® MTB/RIF introduction in Papua New Guinea, 2012-2017.

Lavu EK, Johnson K, Banamu J, Pandey S, Carter R, Coulter C, Aia P, Majumdar SS, Marais BJ, Graham SM, Vince J.

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  • Published 21 Sep 2019

  • Volume 9

  • ISSUE Suppl 1

  • Pagination S12-18

  • DOI 10.5588/pha.19.0005.

Abstract

Setting: Xpert® MTB/RIF was introduced in Papua New Guinea in 2012 for the diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) and of rifampicin-resistant TB (RR-TB), a marker of multi-drug-resistant TB (MDR-TB).

Objective: To assess the concordance of Xpert with phenotypic drug susceptibility testing (DST) performed at the supranational reference laboratory and to describe the patterns of drug-resistant TB observed.

Design: This was a retrospective descriptive study of laboratory data collected from April 2012 to December 2017.

Results: In 69 months, 1408 specimens with Xpert results were sent for mycobacterial culture and DST; Mycobacterium tuberculosis was cultured from 63% (884/1408) and DST was completed in 99.4%. The concordance between Xpert and culture for M. tuberculosis detection was 98.6%. Of 760 RR-TB cases, 98.7% were detected using Xpert; 98.5% of 620 MDR-TB cases were identified using phenotypic DST. Phenotypic resistance to second-line drugs was detected in 59.4% (522/879) of specimens tested, including 29 with fluoroquinolone resistance; the majority were from the National Capital District and Daru Island.

Conclusion: The high concordance between phenotypic DST and Xpert in identifying RR-TB cases supports the scale-up of initial Xpert testing in settings with high rates of drug resistance. However, rapid DST in addition to the detection of RR-TB is required.