17 votes

A fast and accurate tuberculosis test that doesn't need phlegm

4 comments

  1. skybrian
    Link
    From the article: [...]

    From the article:

    The most common test to determine if someone has tuberculosis hasn't really changed since the late 1800s. The process relies on phlegm.

    "It's a nasty substance," says Adithya Cattamanchi, a pulmonologist at UC Irvine. "No one likes it, right? You don't like to cough it up. Health workers don't like to work with it. It's difficult to work with in the lab because it's so viscous." In addition, not everyone can produce phlegm easily, including children, the elderly and those weakened by disease.

    The phlegm is then examined under a microscope for the telltale tuberculosis bacteria. But the test is imperfect and imprecise. Sometimes patients are told they have TB when they don't. And about half the time, the test misses actual TB cases.

    "So for a long time, we have been trying to make the diagnosis of tuberculosis easier, cheaper, and quicker," says Alfred Andama, a microbiologist at Makerere University College of Health Sciences in Uganda.

    That desire was fulfilled last year when the Chinese company Pluslife announced a new tuberculosis test called the MiniDock MTB. It works by taking a sample of someone's phlegm or — if the patient is unable to produce phlegm — a mere tongue swab, heating and spinning it down, and then machine scanning it for DNA from the TB bacteria. It's faster than conventional tests and is portable, allowing health workers to use it in a wider variety of settings.

    [...]

    The new test followed from a burst of innovation during the pandemic, a period when swab-based testing for COVID-19 improved dramatically due to an infusion of effort and cash from researchers and industry.

    8 votes
  2. [2]
    trim
    (edited )
    Link
    I’m sure our TB test at school in the late 70s was a flower prick on the forearm. If it inflamed, you had antibodies already. Of my cohort in the 70s, mine was the only one to flare up. Oh how the...

    I’m sure our TB test at school in the late 70s was a flower prick on the forearm. If it inflamed, you had antibodies already.

    Of my cohort in the 70s, mine was the only one to flare up. Oh how the other kids laughed, took the piss and told me I was going to die.

    Oh how the turns tabled when they found out they needed the bloody awful BCG then they all went around punching each other on the tops of the arms for days afterwards for laughs.

    Apparently I must have had some kind of TB exposure as a kid but no one was quite sure why I was showing immunity.

    Avoided being scarred for life with that damnable injection though.

    5 votes
    1. snake_case
      Link Parent
      At our school we had the same test, and the kids who had traveled out of the country and thus gotten a TB vaccine tested positive and then had to go in for a chest xray

      At our school we had the same test, and the kids who had traveled out of the country and thus gotten a TB vaccine tested positive and then had to go in for a chest xray

      3 votes
  3. redwall_hp
    Link
    Interesting, I didn't know it was tested with phlegm in the first place. I have to get an annual blood test for TB, because I take a biologic that increases susceptibility to it.

    Interesting, I didn't know it was tested with phlegm in the first place. I have to get an annual blood test for TB, because I take a biologic that increases susceptibility to it.