Nearly 40 percent of adults with HIV/AIDS in Africa die of TB as
almost half of TB cases remain undiagnosed and untreated, according
to researcher Keertan Dheda, whose study was published in The Lancet
medical journal.
"For patients with advanced HIV, it's hard to diagnose what
infection they have and it's particularly hard to diagnose TB,"
Dheda told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
TB is the leading cause of death in people with HIV in low- and
middle-income countries, Dheda wrote in The Lancet. The World Health
Organisation has said TB now rivals HIV/AIDS as a leading cause of
death from infectious diseases.
Diagnosing TB in patients with HIV is difficult because conventional
tests require taking an X-ray of the chest and a mucus sample,
though for severely ill patients it can be hard to produce mucus,
Dheda said.
The new urine test, which costs $2.66, provides results in 25
minutes and does not require a mucus sample.
"What we showed in the study is that if you use this new test and a
guided treatment based on this test you can actually save lives,"
Dheda said by phone from South Africa.
The test was particularly effective in identifying TB among patients
with advanced HIV infection who were most vulnerable to TB, the
study said.
"The absolute reduction in mortality was small at 4 percent, but
with 300,000 patients with HIV dying from TB in Africa every year,
implementing this low-cost, rapid, bedside test could potentially
save thousands of lives annually," Dheda said in a statement.
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"The reduction in mortality is likely to be because urine testing,
in conjunction with routine testing, resulted in a greater
proportion of patients starting tuberculosis treatment early."
He said the test can be used to diagnose TB in patients with HIV
anywhere in the world.
The research was carried out on 2,500 patients in 10 hospitals
across four countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
(Reporting by Magdalena Mis, editing by Tim Pearce. Please credit
Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters,
that covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, corruption and
climate change. Visit news.trust.org)
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