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Title: Detection of human immunodeficiency virus infection in the sputum of tuberculosis patients in South India. Author: Grandin W, Dev AV, Latha A, Armstrong L, Mathai D, John KR, Daley P. Journal: Int J Tuberc Lung Dis; 2010 Oct; 14(10):1288-94. PubMed ID: 20843420. Abstract: SETTING: A DOTS clinic in an academic tertiary referral hospital in South India. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the performance of two rapid enzyme-linked immunoassays (EIAs) for the detection of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in sputum samples of patients with tuberculosis (TB). DESIGN: We prospectively recruited 522 consecutive out-patients presenting to the DOTS clinic with confirmed TB of any type to undergo HIV testing using reference serum EIA and index-blinded parallel sputum HIV testing with two rapid EIAs designed for oral mucosal transudate. RESULTS: HIV positivity was 14.9% (95%CI 12.1-18.4). Compared to reference serum EIA, the Oraquick™ assay was 93.1% sensitive (95%CI 83.8-97.4) and 95.3% specific (95%CI 92.7-96.9), while the Aware™ assay was 92.3% sensitive (95%CI 83.4-96.8) and 96.6% specific (95%CI 94.4-98.0). The positive predictive values were respectively 77.0% and 82.7%. After freezing of sputum, the sensitivity of both assays declined, but the specificity significantly increased. Higher sputum volume reduced the odds of obtaining a true result with both assays. CONCLUSION: HIV testing of fresh sputum is not sufficiently accurate for anonymous HIV surveillance among TB patients in a setting of low (<10%) HIV prevalence. Freezing sputum samples and limiting sputum volume for HIV testing may improve assay specificity.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]