Tag Archives: local health

Doubts cast on TB blood test

Blood tests designed to detect active TB are inaccurate and should be banned, the World Health Organization has said.

More than two million such tests are carried out annually, but the WHO says they are unethical and lead to misdiagnosis and the mistreatment of patients.

The organisation’s review of these tuberculosis test kits says they give wrong results in around 50% of cases.

The kits are mainly sold in the developing world.

However, most of the 18 kits on the market are produced in Europe and North America.

According to Dr Mario Raviglone, the director of the WHO Stop TB Department, the tests must be banned.

He said: “A blood test for diagnosing active TB disease is bad practice. Tests are inconsistent, imprecise and put patients’ lives in danger.”

The tests work by detecting antibodies or antigens in the blood that are produced in response to the bacterium.

But some of these commercial tests have what’s called “low sensitivity” which leads to large numbers of patients being told they do not have TB when they do.

Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis

Dr Karen Weyer, who is also from the WHO Stop TB department, added: “The evidence we reviewed over the past couple of months shows that one in two patients will be wrongly diagnosed, either [as] false negative or false positive.

“If it’s a false negative patients get the all clear when they in fact have TB, the disease continues to spread, and the patients may die.

“If, on the other hand, it’s false positive, patients are put on treatments unnecessarily while the true cause of their disease remains undiagnosed.”

“We would describe this as unethical – and we are making a very strong urge to governments to consider that TB is a threat and the use of these ineffective tests is also a threat.”

The WHO says that the tests which are manufactured in Europe and North America are prevented from going on sale where they are made due to regulations that call for extensive evidence of accuracy.


But this is not the case in the developing world – including in India and China.

Dr Weyer added: “One of the major problems is that these developing countries often have little or very weak regulatory mechanisms to make sure that tests are registered before they are used at country level.

“Another problem is that these tests are often used in the private sector, which is a difficult sector to regulate and as a result there is a wide misuse, I would say, of these inaccurate tests in the private sector in at least 17 countries that we are aware of.”

She said there was a need for a TB test that could be used “at the bedside”. But she added: “We don’t have a blood test for TB that can be used at the point of care level.”

The WHO says this call for a ban is a highly unusual move – It’s the first time the organisation has issued an explicitly negative policy recommendation against a practice that is widely used in tuberculosis care.

TB kills 1.7m people every year, and is the biggest cause of death of people living with HIV.

Tuberculosis at a 30 year high

Thousands of babies could be vaccinated against tuberculosis amid concern over soaring rates of infection.

The number of cases has risen by 50 per cent in the past decade and NHS officials fear it is becoming out of control.

Doctors and managers of health trusts in London – which has the highest infection rates in Britain – are drawing up plans to vaccinate all babies within six weeks of birth.

GPs would be encouraged to test for the disease in all new patients registering with their surgery, particularly those coming from countries with very high infection rates.

The plans would also see family doctors, nurses and midwives and housing workers undergo extra training to help them spot the symptoms of the illness – a notorious killer well into the 20th century.

The draft proposals have been drawn up by London Health Programmes, an NHS organisation made up of front-line workers and managers that works with local health trusts to improve treatment and services.

Health officials will decide whether babies need to be vaccinated as final plans are published in the autumn.
Rates of TB have hit a 30-year high with 9,040 infections in Britain last year, Health Protection Agency figures show. This is the highest number recorded since 1979, when there were 9,266 cases.

Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis

The disease is often brought into the country by immigrants from India, South-East Asia and Africa, and it is also common amongst the homeless and drug users.

London has by far the highest rates of infections in Britain, accounting for 40 per cent of the country’s total number of cases.

Other hotspots include Birmingham, Leicester and North-West England, although it is not clear whether health trusts in these areas would decide to vaccinate all babies.

The disease, which is caused by bacteria, attacks the lungs and typical symptoms include cough, fever, tiredness, lack of appetite, night sweats and weight loss.

It can spread to many parts of the body, including the bones and nervous system.

A person can catch TB by being in the same room as an infected person.

The Bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccine, also known as the BCG vaccine, can protect against TB. The jab was discontinued for schoolchildren in 2005.


Onn Min Kon, a consultant at St Mary’s Hospital, London and clinical adviser for the London TB Plan, said: ‘You go to Joe Public and he thinks that TB is a beaten disease and it’s not a concern.

‘The public needs to know it is not beaten. The risk is low but in London there are some bits where you could call it endemic.

‘Rates in some boroughs are higher than parts of the Indian subcontinent.

‘All of us will have plenty of examples of people who are theoretically at low risk, but have TB.’

A Department of Health spokesman said: ‘We recognise that tuberculosis is a serious issue in London, particularly in more deprived boroughs and among the migrant community.

‘The local NHS continues to monitor the number of TB cases in the capital and works closely with partner agencies to identify and treat those with TB.

‘We welcome the consultation on the draft TB Plan for London. However, consideration of future vaccination needs is just one of a range of areas the plan identifies for control of TB.’