Automated diagnosis of Tuberculosis: A review of advancements
Objective: A narrative review of advances in automated diagnostic tests for diagnosis of tuberculosis infections. Methods: Electronic databases were searched for tests on automation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis identiï€cation. Studies were selected and evaluated that tested for the performance o...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Babcock Medical Society
2015-06-01
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Series: | Babcock University Medical Journal |
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Online Access: | http://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/12 |
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author | EO Shobowale AO Coker BA Adegunle |
author_facet | EO Shobowale AO Coker BA Adegunle |
author_sort | EO Shobowale |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Objective: A narrative review of advances in automated diagnostic tests for diagnosis of tuberculosis infections.
Methods: Electronic databases were searched for tests on automation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis identiï€cation. Studies were selected and evaluated that tested for the performance of new and old methods in automated diagnosis with significant impact on the turn-around time of diagnosis and also positive impact on patient care with respect to outcomes.
Results: A total of 40 studies were included. Overall, the gene expert system was found to be superior when applied to respiratory samples as opposed to other body fluids when compared to other test methods.
High specificity estimates suggest that Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests (NAATS) should be the first-line test for rapid diagnosis of meningitis, but that they also need to be combined with the result of other tests in order to rule out disease.
Discussion: Fully automated liquid culture methods overall are superior to mycobacterial culture on solid media, in terms of speed of diagnosis, ease of use and their accuracy with several user friendly systems that can be applied to the Nigerian environment.
Conclusion: The DNA amplification tests provide a reliable way of increasing the specificity of diagnosis. Their superior diagnostic capability has been found to hold up in routine clinical practice, and they could confer several advantages on tuberculosis control programs. |
first_indexed | 2024-12-19T18:16:10Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-1257ad264bbb4fbfa947601334486de1 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2465-6666 2756-4657 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-12-19T18:16:10Z |
publishDate | 2015-06-01 |
publisher | Babcock Medical Society |
record_format | Article |
series | Babcock University Medical Journal |
spelling | doaj.art-1257ad264bbb4fbfa947601334486de12022-12-21T20:11:06ZengBabcock Medical SocietyBabcock University Medical Journal2465-66662756-46572015-06-011210.38029/bumj.v1i2.1212Automated diagnosis of Tuberculosis: A review of advancementsEO ShobowaleAO CokerBA AdegunleObjective: A narrative review of advances in automated diagnostic tests for diagnosis of tuberculosis infections. Methods: Electronic databases were searched for tests on automation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis identiï€cation. Studies were selected and evaluated that tested for the performance of new and old methods in automated diagnosis with significant impact on the turn-around time of diagnosis and also positive impact on patient care with respect to outcomes. Results: A total of 40 studies were included. Overall, the gene expert system was found to be superior when applied to respiratory samples as opposed to other body fluids when compared to other test methods. High specificity estimates suggest that Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests (NAATS) should be the first-line test for rapid diagnosis of meningitis, but that they also need to be combined with the result of other tests in order to rule out disease. Discussion: Fully automated liquid culture methods overall are superior to mycobacterial culture on solid media, in terms of speed of diagnosis, ease of use and their accuracy with several user friendly systems that can be applied to the Nigerian environment. Conclusion: The DNA amplification tests provide a reliable way of increasing the specificity of diagnosis. Their superior diagnostic capability has been found to hold up in routine clinical practice, and they could confer several advantages on tuberculosis control programs.http://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/12Mycobacterium tuberculosisAutomated diagnosisBACTEC 460Gene XpertMGIT 960 |
spellingShingle | EO Shobowale AO Coker BA Adegunle Automated diagnosis of Tuberculosis: A review of advancements Babcock University Medical Journal Mycobacterium tuberculosis Automated diagnosis BACTEC 460 Gene Xpert MGIT 960 |
title | Automated diagnosis of Tuberculosis: A review of advancements |
title_full | Automated diagnosis of Tuberculosis: A review of advancements |
title_fullStr | Automated diagnosis of Tuberculosis: A review of advancements |
title_full_unstemmed | Automated diagnosis of Tuberculosis: A review of advancements |
title_short | Automated diagnosis of Tuberculosis: A review of advancements |
title_sort | automated diagnosis of tuberculosis a review of advancements |
topic | Mycobacterium tuberculosis Automated diagnosis BACTEC 460 Gene Xpert MGIT 960 |
url | http://bumj.babcock.edu.ng/index.php/bumj/article/view/12 |
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