Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Microbiology1 and
2. Department of Epidemiology and Public Health,2 Ege University Medical School, Izmir, and
3. Department of Clinical Microbiology, Firat University Medical School, Elazig,3 Turkey
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We evaluated cord formation in MB/BacT broth as a rapid method for presumptive identification of the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
complex. Kinyoun acid-fast-stained smears from 370 positive MB/BacT bottles were examined for the presence of serpentine cording. The smears were examined independently by two observers. Observer 1 (the supervisor of the mycobacteriology laboratory) examined all of the smears while observer 2 (a clinical microbiologist not familiar with acid-fast bacillus [AFB] microscopy) examined 148 randomly chosen smears that were read by observer 1 without knowledge of which smear was which. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of cording for the presumptive identification of
M. tuberculosis
read by observer 1 were 88.2, 97.4, 99.2, and 69.7%, respectively. These values were reported at 90.6, 52.3, 82.8, and 69.7%, respectively, by observer 2. Our laboratory prevalence of
M. tuberculosis
among positive cultures was 78% during the time this study was conducted. At the time of positive signal of the MB/BacT bottles, the broth of the bottles had sufficient cell mass to allow for observation of the presence or absence of serpentine cording. The presence of cords in MB/BacT broth is a reliable criterion for rapid, predictive identification of the
M. tuberculosis
complex for laboratories with a high proportion of the
M. tuberculosis
complex when the smears are examined by a microbiologist who has experience with AFB staining.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
15 articles.
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