Conference Coverage

Hospital urine screening reduces TB deaths in HIV+ adults


 

REPORTING FROM CROI

– Urine-based screening for tuberculosis added to standard sputum-based screening can reduce the risk of TB-associated deaths among hospitalized patients with advanced HIV compared with sputum-based screening alone, results of a randomized trial indicate.

Among 2,574 hospitalized HIV-positive patients, the rate of death at 56 days, the primary endpoint, was 21.1% for patients screened with standard-of-care sputum testing using the Xpert MTB/RIF assay, compared with 18.3% for patients screened with sputum testing and urine-sample testing by the Xpert MTB/RIF and the Determine TB-LAM urine dipstick test, reported Ankur Gupta-Wright, MBBS, MRCP, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Dr. Ankur Gupta-Wright

Dr. Ankur Gupta-Wright

However, the reductions in mortality seen with the urine-based screening were observed only in the patients with more advanced HIV infections (CD4 cell counts below 100/uL), he said at the annual Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI).

“For every 100 patients who are HIV-positive admitted to hospital, with screening for TB using new urine-based testing in addition to sputum testing we can diagnose approximately seven extra TB case, and save approximately three lives,” he said at a briefing following his presentation of the data in a late-breaking oral abstract session.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Inflammatory markers predict vaccine response in HCV, HIV
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: The return of Kaposi’s sarcoma
MDedge Internal Medicine
Bloating. Flatulence. Think SIBO
MDedge Internal Medicine
One-month TB-prevention regimen effective in HIV+ individuals
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hair tracks HIV antiretroviral adherence
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA approves new treatment for multidrug-resistant HIV
MDedge Internal Medicine
HIV diagnosis at home and same-day ART start tied to better outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Raltegravir not associated with IRIS in African trial
MDedge Internal Medicine
‘Clean and sober’ ex-prisoners have better HIV suppression
MDedge Internal Medicine
Looking to increase PrEP uptake
MDedge Internal Medicine