OUP accepted manuscript

Devan Jaganath,Tania F Reza, Peter Wambi, Jascent Nakafeero, Emma Kiconco, Gertrude Nanyonga, Ernest A Oumo, Moses C Nsereko,Moorine P Sekadde, Mary G Nabukenya-Mudiope,Midori Kato-Maeda,Alfred Andama,Christina Yoon,Swomitra Mohanty,Eric Wobudeya,Adithya Cattamanchi

Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society(2022)

引用 0|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
C-reactive protein (CRP) has shown promise as a triage tool for pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) in adults living with the human immunodeficiency virus. We performed the first assessment of CRP for TB triage in children.Symptomatic children less than 15 years old were prospectively enrolled in Kampala, Uganda. We completed a standard TB evaluation and measured CRP using a point-of-care assay. We determined the sensitivity and specificity of CRP to identify pulmonary TB in children using 10 mg/L and 5 mg/L cut-off points and generated a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve to determine alternative cut-offs that could approach the target accuracy for a triage test (≥90% sensitivity and ≥70% specificity).We included 332 children (median age 3 years old, interquartile range [IQR]: 1-6). The median CRP level was low at 3.0 mg/L (IQR: 2.5-26.6) but was higher in children with Confirmed TB than in children with Unlikely TB (9.5 mg/L vs. 2.9 mg/L, P-value = .03). At a 10 mg/L cut-off, CRP sensitivity was 50.0% (95% confidence interval [CI], 37.0-63.0) among Confirmed TB cases and specificity was 63.3% (95% CI, 54.7-71.3) among children with Unlikely TB. Sensitivity increased to 56.5% (95% CI, 43.3-69.0) at the 5 mg/L cut-off, but specificity decreased to 54.0% (95% CI, 45.3-62.4). The area under the ROC curve was 0.59 (95% CI, 0.51-0.67), and the highest sensitivity achieved was 66.1% at a specificity of 46.8%.CRP levels were low in children with pulmonary TB, and CRP was unable to achieve the accuracy targets for a TB triage test.
更多
查看译文
关键词
pulmonary tuberculosis,protein,c-reactive
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要