HIV Clinical Trial
Official title:
Investigating the Additive Benefit of the Urine Lipoarabinomannan Test to Current TB Diagnostics Among HIV+ Adults in Panama City, Panama
Tuberculosis (TB) is one opportunistic infection often seen in HIV individuals. In 2013, there were an estimated 31,800 HIV-TB co-infection cases and 6,100 HIV-related deaths due to TB in the Americas. Due to the non-specific nature of its clinical symptoms, TB can be confused with various diseases such as histoplasmosis, sarcoidosis, lymphoma, and pneumonia. In Panama, where Histoplasma capsulatum is endemic, diagnosing TB versus histoplasmosis based on clinical symptoms can be difficult. In Panama, approximately 7.65% of HIV patients are co-infected with histoplasmosis, and there is a 30% mortality rate in HIV-histoplasmosis patients in Latin America. Due to similar clinical features, misdiagnosis of active TB and disseminated histoplasmosis in endemic regions may lead to incorrect antibiotic management, which in turn results in unnecessary toxicity, antibiotic resistance, and monetary expenditures. The investigators interests lie in increasing TB diagnostic accuracy using a simple urine dipstick test and evaluating physician response to new diagnostic testing, in order to reduce misdiagnosis and improve health outcomes in the HIV population.
The gold standard for TB diagnosis, mycobacterial culture, is limited by a slow turnaround
time, the need for skilled technicians and biosafety level 3 facilities. Another diagnostic
test, Xpert MTB/RIF, produces same-day results, boasts a specificity of 98%, but is limited
in the HIV population by its sensitivity of 67% (with a single sputum sample). High costs
associated with this test have presented a major obstacle to its routine use (US$65,500 for a
16-module instrument, and US$9.98 to US$18.00 per cartridge). The urine lipoarabinomannan
(LAM) Ag test has a specificity of 98.6% and a sensitivity of 66.7% in patients with a CD4
count below 50. LAM is a 17.5kD glycolipid and virulence factor of mycobacteria. The test's
sensitivity improves in advanced HIV cases because of the higher bacillary burden, more
frequent disseminated TB, and greater concentration of urine antigen due to less
antigen-antibody formation, and HIV nephropathy. The test strip contains its own positive and
negative controls for quality assurance, and can utilize fresh urine samples stored at room
temperature for up to 8 hours after collection. In the right clinical setting, the urine LAM
Ag test could have an important additive benefit in TB diagnosis in HIV individuals when
combined with the current standards of care.
This study is investigating how physician management and patient outcomes change when the
urine LAM test is added to the current TB diagnostic tests (mycobacterial cultures and
occasional use of Xpert MTB/RIF). The national referral hospital in Panama, Hospital Santo
Tomás, is an ideal study site given its dedicated HIV inpatient service and high TB and
histoplasmosis burden. Histoplasmosis diagnosis is often based on clinical symptoms alone,
and less frequently confirmed by skin or bone marrow biopsy. Due to diagnostic uncertainty,
40% of HIV patients with fever and cough receive dual TB and histoplasmosis therapy. Their
current standard of TB care includes sputum AFB microscopy and culture. However, rapid
results are only available for the sputum AFB, which has a sensitivity of approximately 30%.
The urine LAM Ag test is not presently used there. When combined with the urine LAM Ag test,
sputum AFB has a sensitivity of 25% (if CD4>200) to 72% (if CD4<50). Over the next year,
investigators plan to study changes in physician diagnostic classification and management
decisions before and after the introduction of the urine LAM Ag test. This information would
not only aid in TB diagnosis, but also in the investigators understanding of how physicians
integrate new information.
The main objective is to determine the effect of urine LAM Ag test results in reducing dual
TB/histoplasmosis therapy, by comparing the rate and duration of dual therapy in the urine
LAM group to a retrospective control group. The investigators second objective is to
investigate barriers to incorporating the urine LAM Ag test and how the results impact
physicians' approaches to treatment using a physician questionnaire.
A clinical trial study will be conducted using HIV positive patients from June 2016 to June
2017 who present with pertinent clinical criteria at Hospital Santo Tomás. Following urine
LAM Ag test administration, results will immediately be provided to the treating physicians.
The control group will consist of retrospectively selected patients from the Hospital Santo
Tomás database who fit the same inclusion and exclusion, matched for age, sex, and clinical
severity. Patient outcome data will be collected from the day of hospital admittance to their
time of discharge. Following the conclusion of data collection, consenting physicians will be
interviewed on benefits and barriers to incorporating the urine LAM Ag test within their
practice.
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