Detection of rifampicin resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from diverse countries by a commercial line probe assay as an initial indicator of multidrug resistance.

H. Traore(Instituut voor Tropische Geneeskunde), K. Fissette, I. Bastian, Michel Devleeschouwer, F. Portaels
PubMed
May 1, 2000
Cited by 154

Abstract

The line probe assay (LiPA), a rapid molecular method for detecting rifampicin resistance (RMPr) in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, correctly identified all 145 rifampicin-sensitive (RMPs) and 262 (98.5%) of 266 RMPr strains among 411 isolates collected from diverse countries. If used as a marker of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), detection of RMPr by LiPA would have detected 236 of the 240 MDR strains in this study but would have wrongly suggested the presence of MDR in 26 RMP-monoresistant isolates (sensitivity 98.3%, specificity 84.8%). Hence, the reliability of using LiPA (or any other rapid RMPr-detection method) as a surrogate marker of MDR-TB largely depends on the prevalence of RMP-monoresistance in the study population. This approach must therefore be validated in each local situation.


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