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Journal Article
|Research

Diagnostic accuracy of tuberculin skin test self-reading by HIV patients in a low-resource setting

Cox V, De Azevedo V, Stinson K, Wilkinson LS, Rangaka MX, Boyles TH
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Diagnostic accuracy of tuberculin skin test self-reading by HIV patients in a low-resource setting | Journal Article / Research | MSF Science Portal
Abstract
BACKGROUND
The World Health Organization recommends tuberculin skin tests (TSTs) where feasible to identify individuals most likely to benefit from isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT). The requirement for TST reading after 48–72 h by a trained nurse is a barrier to implementation and increases loss to follow-up.

METHODS
Patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection were recruited from a primary care clinic in South Africa and trained by a lay counsellor to interpret their own TST. The TST was placed by a nurse, and the patient was asked to return 2 days later with their self-reading result, followed by blinded reading by a trained nurse (reference).

RESULTS
Of 227 patients, 210 returned for TST reading; 78% interpreted their test correctly: those interpreting it as negative were more likely to be correct (negative predictive value 93%) than those interpreting it as positive (positive predictive value 42%); 10/36 (28%) positive TST results were read as negative by the patient.

CONCLUSIONS
Patients with HIV in low-resource settings can be trained to interpret their own TST. Those interpreting it as positive should return to the clinic within 48–72 h for confirmatory reading and IPT initiation; those with a negative interpretation can return at their next scheduled visit and initiate IPT at that time if appropriate.

Countries

South Africa

Subject Area

tuberculosisdiagnosticsHIV/AIDS

Languages

English
DOI
10.5588/ijtld.15.0015
Published Date
01 Nov 2015
PubMed ID
26467581
Journal
International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease
Volume | Issue | Pages
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages 1300-1304
Issue Date
2015-11-01
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