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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, October 2000, p. 3608-3611, Vol. 38, No. 10
Department of Laboratory Medicine, School of
Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, and Microbiology
Division, Clinical Laboratories, San Francisco General Hospital, San
Francisco, California
Received 19 June 2000/Returned for modification 26 June
2000/Accepted 18 July 2000
The BACTEC 460 radiometric mycobacterial broth culture system has
consistently demonstrated faster and increased recovery of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis from respiratory specimens of
patients with pulmonary tuberculosis than conventional culture methods. We thus questioned whether three sputa were still necessary to definitively diagnose pulmonary tuberculosis if the BACTEC radiometric culture system were in use. We performed a retrospective analysis of
430 sequential respiratory specimens submitted from 143 patients and
from which M. tuberculosis had been recovered by in vitro culture and simultaneously assessed the diagnostic yield of acid-fast smear in this same cohort. M. tuberculosis was recovered
from the first specimen for 117 (82%) of the 143 patients, from the second for 14 patients (10%; cumulative rate, 92%), and from the third for 12 patients (8%; cumulative rate, 100%). With the exception of those for bronchial brushings, recovery rates of M. tuberculosis were comparable for all respiratory specimen types
(expectorated sputum, induced sputum, tracheal aspirates,
bronchoalveolar lavage fluids). Only 46 (32%) of these 143 patients
had acid-fast bacilli detected in smears; acid-fast bacilli were
detected in the first submitted specimen for 44 patients (96%) and in
the second for the remaining 2 patients (4%; cumulative rate, 100%).
Culture- or smear-positive rates for sequential specimens obtained from AIDS patients were comparable to those for non-AIDS patients. Overall,
the diagnostic culture yield of sequentially submitted specimens was
not different from previously published studies in which the BACTEC
radiometric culture system had not been used. Despite the documented
enhanced ability of the BACTEC 460 radiometric mycobacterial culture
system to recover M. tuberculosis more often and faster
than conventional methods, three sequential respiratory specimens
(regardless of type) were still necessary to definitively diagnose
pulmonary tuberculosis.
0095-1137/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Increased Sensitivity of the BACTEC 460 Mycobacterial Radiometric Broth Culture System Does Not Decrease the
Number of Respiratory Specimens Required for a Definitive Diagnosis
of Pulmonary Tuberculosis

*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Clinical
Laboratories 2M24, San Francisco General Hospital, 1001 Potrero Ave.,
San Francisco, CA 94110. Phone: (415) 206-8588. Fax: (415) 206-3045. E-mail: ng{at}pangloss.ucsf.edu.
Present address: Department of Pathology, School of Medicine,
Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.
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