Estimated costs of false laboratory diagnoses of tuberculosis in three patients. (Tuberculosis Genotyping Network).We estimated direct medical and nonmedical costs associated with a false diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) caused by laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mycobacterium tuberculosis n. Tubercic bacillus. Mycobacterium tuberculosis cultures in Massachusetts in 1998 and 1999. For three patients who received misdiagnoses of active TB disease on the basis of laboratory cross-contamination, the costs totaled U.S.$32,618. Of the total, 97% was attributed to the public sector (local and state health departments, public health hospital and laboratory, and county and state correctional facilities); 3% to the private sector (physicians, hospitals, and laboratories); and <1% to the patient. Hospitalizations and inpatient inpatient /in·pa·tient/ (in´pa-shent) a patient who comes to a hospital or other health care facility for diagnosis or treatment that requires an overnight stay. in·pa·tient n. tests, procedures, and TB medications accounted for 69% of costs, and outpatient TB medications accounted for 18%. The average cost per patient was $10,873 (range, $1,033-$21,306). Reducing laboratory cross-contamination and quickly identifying patients with cross-contaminated cultures can prevent unnecessary and potentially dangerous treatment regimens and anguish for the patient and financial burden to the health-care system. ********** To date, studies investigating cases of laboratory cross-contamination have described only the resources to care for patients who received false diagnoses of tuberculosis (TB) (1-6); to our knowledge, the costs attributable to cross-contamination have not been reported. We estimated direct medical and nonmedical costs for three patients whose misdiagnoses of active TB disease resulted from laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis cultures. The costs totaled U.S.$32,618. By examining the costs from the perspective of the patient and the public and private sectors, we documented the financial costs to the health-care system caused by laboratory cross-contamination. The rate of patients having false-positive M. tuberculosis M. tuberculosis, n the bacterium responsible for tuberculosis, generally a respiratory infection in man; nonrespiratory tuberculosis is considered an indicator disease for AIDS. See also tuberculosis. cultures resulting from laboratory cross-contamination may be up to 33% of culture-confirmed TB patients (1-3,7-11). Reportedly two thirds of patients with false-positive cultures are treated for active TB disease (4) and may undergo unnecessary, potentially toxic anti-TB therapy. Public health departments may initiate costly activities such as contact investigations and directly observed therapy directly observed therapy Therapeutics A strategy for ensuring Pt compliance with therapy, where a health care worker or designee watches the Pt swallow each dose of prescribed drugs. See Patient compliance. Cf Directed observation. . Dunlap et al. report that if persons who receive misdiagnoses resulting from laboratory cross-contamination were treated as TB case-patients with contact investigations and 6 months of directly observed therapy, the costs to the health-care system would be $2,500 per patient (12) in 1993 U.S. dollars, or $3,111 in 1999 dollars, when the Medical Care component of the Consumer Price Index is used to convert 1993 dollars to 1999 dollars. Methods Identifying Patients As part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded National Tuberculosis Genotyping Genotyping refers to the process of determining the genotype of an individual with a biological assay. Current methods of doing this include PCR, DNA sequencing, and hybridization to DNA microarrays or beads. and Surveillance Network, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health The Massachusetts Department of Public Health is a governmental agency of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts with various responsibilities related to public health within that state. , Division of Tuberculosis Prevention and Control (TB Division), conducted a population-based study to determine the rate of TB misdiagnosis mis·di·ag·no·sis n. pl. mis·di·ag·no·ses An incorrect diagnosis. mis·di ag·nose in Massachusetts caused by
laboratory cross-contamination of M. tuberculosis specimens.The study also evaluated the following criteria that may assist TB control programs to identify patients with potentially cross-contaminated cultures: 1) the patient had a single respiratory specimen positive for M. tuberculosis, regardless of acid-fast bacilli bacilli /ba·cil·li/ (bah-sil´i) plural of bacillus. bacilli see bacillus. (AFB AFB abbr. acid-fast bacillus AFB Acid-fast bacillus, also 1. Aflatoxin B 2. Aorto-femoral bypass ) smear smear (smer) a specimen for microscopic study prepared by spreading the material across the slide. Pap smear , Papanicolaou smear see under test. status; a single extrapulmonary body fluid specimen positive for M. tuberculosis, regardless of AFB status; or a single tissue specimen positive for M. tuberculosis without evidence of AFB or granuloma granuloma /gran·u·lo·ma/ (gran?u-lo´mah) pl. granulomas, granulo´mata an imprecise term for (1) any small nodular delimited aggregation of mononuclear inflammatory cells, or (2) such a collection of modified macrophages on histologic examination histologic examination The study of a tissue specimen by staining it and examining it by LM. See Light microscopy. ; 2) the patient had an M. tuberculosis culture-positive specimen collected >30 days after the collection of an M. tuberculosis culture-negative specimen, and the isolate had a unique genotype genotype (jēn`ətīp'): see genetics. genotype Genetic makeup of an organism. The genotype determines the hereditary potentials and limitations of an individual. compared with any previous isolate from the same patient; 3) the patient had an M. tuberculosis culture-positive specimen collected >90 days after the start of appropriate, continuous anti-TB therapy, and the isolate had a unique genotype compared with any previous isolate from the same patient; 4) a caretaker indicated that an M. tuberculosis culture-positive result was clinically inconsistent; or 5) a laboratorian indicated that the M. tuberculosis culture-positive result might be false. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health Human Research Review Committee reviewed the protocol and waived oversight. Personnel in 24 mycobacteriology laboratories (all the laboratories that were processing specimens for AFB for persons in Massachusetts at the time) and public health professionals worked together to identify patients with potentially cross-contaminated specimens. Persons who were reported in Massachusetts as possible TB patients and were reported as having M. tuberculosis-positive cultures between January 1, 1998, and June 30, 1999, were prospectively screened. Persons meeting one or more of the criteria were included in the study. We reviewed laboratory records to identify potential sources of cross-contamination, i.e., any M. tuberculosis culture-positive specimen or laboratory control strain processed, reprocessed, or subcultured within 2 working days of the potentially cross-contaminated specimen. For laboratories that did not record usage dates for control strains, the controls were designated as potential sources of cross-contamination and were obtained for genotyping. The genotype was determined for isolates by IS6110-based restriction fragment length polymorphism restriction fragment length polymorphism n. Abbr. RFLP Intraspecies variations in the length of DNA fragments generated by the action of restriction enzymes and caused by mutations that alter the sites at which these enzymes act, changing (RFLP RFLP abbr. restriction fragment length polymorphism RFLP restriction fragment length polymorphism. RFLP ) (13) at the Northeast Regional Genotyping Laboratory, Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York For other uses, see Albany. Albany is the capital of the State of New York and the county seat of Albany County. Albany lies 136 miles (219 km) north of New York City, and slightly to the south of the juncture of the Mohawk and Hudson Rivers. . Spoligotyping (14) was used as a secondary typing method for isolates with five or fewer IS6110 copies. Patients with potentially cross-contaminated isolates that matched organisms from potential sources of contamination by genotype and patients for whom a DNA fingerprint DNA fingerprint n. An individual's unique sequence of DNA base pairs. Also called genetic fingerprint. could not be produced were investigated. Investigations included reviews of medical and public health department records, abstracts from laboratory data, and patient interviews. Because the criteria would potentially identify not only patients with false-positive M. tuberculosis cultures that resulted from laboratory cross-contamination but also patients with false-positive cultures that were caused by other errors as well as true TB cases, a panel of three TB investigators representing other sentinel sentinel /sen·ti·nel/ (sen´ti-n'l) one who gives a warning or indicates danger. sentinel a recording mechanism, such as an animal, a farm or a veterinarian, posted explicitly to record a possible occurrence or series of sites in the genotyping network reviewed the findings. The panel judged whether laboratory cross-contamination was possible, likely, or unlikely and whether the patient had active TB disease or another clinical diagnosis. Estimating Costs The cost of TB misdiagnosis was estimated retrospectively for patients who had M. tuberculosis culture-positive specimens judged to be possibly or likely caused by laboratory cross-contamination and who received inappropriate diagnoses and were treated for TB because of the false-positive results. (Patients judged to have false-positive M. tuberculosis cultures caused by other error were not included in the cost analysis.) Costs for the patient, public sector (local and state health departments, public health hospital and laboratory, and county and state correctional facilities), and private sector (private physicians, hospitals, and laboratories) incurred specifically as a result of the cross-contaminated cultures are included (Table 1). Cost information was collected from the time of initial misdiagnosis until the patient was no longer followed for active TB disease. If patients had other, unrelated medical costs at the same time, the TB medical officer (EN) determined which costs could be attributed to cross-contaminated cultures. Data were collected on direct medical and nonmedical costs for the following: public health department case management and administrative support; outpatient visits; TB medications (started, continued, or changed); directly observed therapy; tests and procedures (bacteriologic bac·te·ri·ol·o·gy n. The study of bacteria, especially in relation to medicine and agriculture. bac·te , radiologic radiologic Radiological adjective Referring to radiology , chemical, hematologic hematological, hematologic pertaining to or emanating from blood cells. hematological tests total and differential white cell counts, hematocrit estimation, erythrocyte count. , pathologic pathologic /patho·log·ic/ (path?ah-loj´ik) 1. indicative of or caused by some morbid condition. 2. pertaining to pathology. , immunologic immunologic, immunological emanating from or pertaining to immunology. immunologic competence see immunocompetence. immunologic domains , bronchoscopic bron·cho·scope n. A slender tubular instrument with a small light on the end for inspection of the interior of the bronchi. bron , and biopsy); health department and hospital contact investigations and diagnostic and treatment services for contacts; and hospitalizations or transfers to hospital isolation rooms. Indirect and intangible costs were excluded. The resources expended ex·pend tr.v. ex·pend·ed, ex·pend·ing, ex·pends 1. To lay out; spend: expending tax revenues on government operations. See Synonyms at spend. 2. for TB care and treatment were identified from records from these sources: local and state public health departments; inpatient and outpatient medical departments; hospital, clinic, and laboratory billing departments; pharmacies; and mycobacteriology laboratories. We obtained information about contact investigations from health department and hospital infection control personnel, and we asked nurses about public health case management. Cost estimates were obtained from several sources described below; detailed cost information for these estimates are available upon request. Public health department personnel costs for case management, administrative support, directly observed therapy provision, and contact investigations were estimated by multiplying the sum of annual salaries, fringe benefits fringe benefits, n.pl the benefits, other than wages or salary, provided by an employer for employees (e.g., health insurance, vacation time, disability income). , and overhead (rent, utilities, and supplies) by the fraction of the year spent on the activity (as estimated by the health department staff). Costs for providing directly observed therapy at a correctional facility were estimated by multiplying hourly salary by the number of hours spent on the activity, as estimated by the health services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract administrator. Costs for outpatient visits to health department TB clinics and for tests and procedures at these clinics were based on the TB Division's reimbursement Reimbursement Payment made to someone for out-of-pocket expenses has incurred. to the clinics. Costs of private outpatient visits, tests, and procedures were estimated on the basis of information from provider and laboratory billing departments. Costs of TB medications and purified protein derivative purified protein derivative see purified protein derivative of tuberculin. (PPD (1) (Parallel Presence Detect) The method used by earlier SIMM memory modules to communicate their capacity to the computer. A binary number coming from a parallel set of pins was read by the system, with each pin representing one bit. Contrast with SPD. ) of tuberculin tuberculin /tu·ber·cu·lin/ (-lin) a sterile solution containing the growth products of, or specific substances extracted from, the tubercle bacillus; used in various forms in the diagnosis of tuberculosis; see also under test. were based on the TB Division's expenditures for TB drugs and PPD for state fiscal years 1999-2000. The mycobacteriology supervisors estimated costs for mycobacteriology procedures at the public health laboratory and one private laboratory. Charges for hospitalizations and inpatient tests and procedures were obtained from patient billing records and were adjusted to market prices by using Medicare provider-specific, cost-to-charge ratios. The medical services senior financial analyst estimated the costs for hospitalization hospitalization /hos·pi·tal·iza·tion/ (hos?pi-t'l-i-za´shun) 1. the placing of a patient in a hospital for treatment. 2. the term of confinement in a hospital. at a correctional facility's infirmary infirmary /in·fir·ma·ry/ (-ah-re) a hospital or place where the sick or infirm are maintained or treated. in·fir·ma·ry n. on the basis of a flat daily bed rate. Calculating Cost Total costs by health-care sector, cost category, and patient were calculated and reported in 1999 U.S. dollars and rounded to the nearest whole dollar. 1998 dollars were adjusted by using the Consumer Price Index Medical Care component. Costs were not discounted because all costs occurred within 1 year of diagnosis. Results Rate of TB Misdiagnosis Between January 1, 1998, and June 30, 1999, 342 of the persons reported as possible TB case-patients in Massachusetts had M. tuberculosis positive cultures; of these, 5 (1.5%) had cultures judged to be cross-contaminated in the laboratory. Three (0.9% of 342) of the five persons received misdiagnoses for active TB disease on the basis of the results (Table 2). Each case had been reported as a verified case of TB for national surveillance, but the status was revoked when information from this investigation became available. Despite their positive cultures, two patients with cross-contaminated cultures were not treated for active TB disease, largely because their physicians did not believe a TB diagnosis was clinically consistent. The mycobacteriology laboratory that processed one patient's specimen questioned the result and performed in-house RFLP typing that confirmed laboratory cross-contamination. Both patients were informed about the false-positive results and reassured about the findings. Costs by Health-Care Sector The costs of caring for the three patients whose misdiagnoses and treatment for active TB resulted from laboratory cross-contamination are summarized in Table 3. The total was estimated to be $32,618 in 1999 U.S. dollars. Ninety-seven percent of costs ($31,552) occurred within the public sector: $14,319 at the public hospital, $9,024 within the correctional system, $7,075 to local and state public health departments, and $1,134 to the public health laboratory. Three percent ($949) occurred within the private sector: $381 at hospitals, $316 from laboratories, and $252 for physicians. The patient incurred <1% of the total costs--$118 that went for TB medications. Costs by Category Across all sectors, hospitalizations (daily inpatient bed rate and differential for transfer to isolation room) accounted for 59% ($19,348) of total costs. This category was followed by TB medications and PPD ($68 inpatient/$5,774 outpatient), tests and procedures ($3,046 inpatient/$1,695 outpatient), personnel time for directly observed therapy provision ($1,376), outpatient visits ($686), personnel time for health department case management and administrative support ($615), and personnel time for contact investigations ($10). In all, $22, 462 (69%) of the total cost came from hospitalizations and inpatient TB medications, tests, and procedures. Costs by Patient The total costs for health care for patients 1, 2, and 3 were $1,033, $10,279, and $21,306, respectively. The average cost per patient was $10,873. Sixty-seven percent of the costs for patient 1 occurred in the private sector: $369 at the hospital, $253 for physicians, and $67 from the laboratory; 22% ($226) by public health departments for case management and administrative support; and 11% ($118) by the patient for TB medications. For patient 2's care, 97% of the costs occurred in the public sector: $7,809 at the public health hospital, $1,491 to health departments, and $720 to the public health laboratory. Three percent of the costs occurred in the private sector: $248 from the laboratory and $11 at the hospital. All costs for patient 3 were within the public sector with $9,024 to county and state correctional facilities, $6,510 at the public health hospital, $5,358 to public health departments, and $414 to the public health laboratory. Discussion Rate of TB Misdiagnosis In Massachusetts, the rate of patients having false-positive cultures resulting from laboratory cross-contamination of M. tuberculosis specimens was 1.5% of the culture-confirmed possible TB cases. This rate is within the range demonstrated in other population-based studies (1-3,7-11). In our study, 60% of the patients with cross-contaminated cultures received misdiagnoses and were treated for active TB disease, yielding a rate of TB misdiagnoses caused by laboratory cross-contamination of 0.9% of patients with culture-confirmed TB. These findings corroborate To support or enhance the believability of a fact or assertion by the presentation of additional information that confirms the truthfulness of the item. The testimony of a witness is corroborated if subsequent evidence, such as a coroner's report or the testimony of other those of Burman and Reves, who estimated that two thirds of patients with false-positive cultures are treated for active TB (4). Costs of Misdiagnosis For the three patients, the costs of TB false diagnoses from laboratory cross-contamination fell largely to the public health and correctional system. Hospitalizations and inpatient tests, procedures, and TB medications accounted for 69% of total health-care sector costs. This finding is consistent with the findings of Brown et al., who demonstrated that inpatient care inpatient care Managed care Services delivered to a Pt who needs physician care for > 24 hrs in a hospital accounted for 60% of TB health-care expenditures in 1991 even though TB is considered an ambulatory Movable; revocable; subject to change; capable of alteration. An ambulatory court was the former name of the Court of King's Bench in England. It would convene wherever the king who presided over it could be found, moving its location as the king moved. disease (15). Moreover, most of the inpatient costs were for the care of patients 2 and 3, whose underlying circumstances contributed to their hospitalization. The costs of TB misdiagnosis varied greatly between the three patients (range $1,033-$21,306) and reflected their unique clinical circumstances and treatment courses. Patient 1 had the lowest costs of the three patients. She was treated with anti-TB therapy for only a few weeks before she died of probable lymphoma lymphoma, a cancer of the tissue of the lymphatic system. There are two categories of lymphomas. One type is termed Hodgkin's disease, the other, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (see lymphoma, non-Hodgkin's). See also neoplasm. . Because extrapulmonary TB extrapulmonary TB Infectious disease Clinical TB outside the lungs–eg, lymph nodes, pleura, brain, kidneys, or bones was diagnosed, no contact investigation was conducted. Patient 2, with cost of care totaling $10,279, completed <2 months of anti-TB therapy. It was discontinued dis·con·tin·ue v. dis·con·tin·ued, dis·con·tin·u·ing, dis·con·tin·ues v.tr. 1. To stop doing or providing (something); end or abandon: secondary to elevated liver function tests Liver Function Tests Definition Liver function tests, or LFTs, include tests for bilirubin, a breakdown product of hemoglobin, and ammonia, a protein byproduct that is normally converted into urea by the liver before being excreted by the kidneys. . The physician found no clinical correlation for a TB diagnosis and did not restart To resume computer operation after a planned or unplanned termination. See boot, warm boot and checkpoint/restart. treatment, thus averting a·vert tr.v. a·vert·ed, a·vert·ing, a·verts 1. To turn away: avert one's eyes. 2. additional costs for a full 6-month course of TB therapy. Although pulmonary TB pulmonary TB Pulmonary tuberculosis, see there was diagnosed, the patient was AFB smear-negative, so only a limited contact investigation was performed: one household contact was tested. The greatest cost ($21,306) was for patient 3. The patient's false-positive culture was discovered only as a result of genotyping through the TB genotyping network, and the patient completed 11 months of an intended 12-month course of anti-TB therapy. A diagnosis of single drug-resistant TB and an HIV-positive status further complicated his care. Because extrapulmonary TB was diagnosed, no contact investigation was conducted. The average cost per patient was $10,873; however, because of the small sample size (n=3), we cannot conclude whether this is a representative estimate of the average cost per TB misdiagnosis. Since two of the patients were hospitalized in a public, long-term care facility long-term care facility n. See skilled nursing facility. rather than an acute-care hospital, the costs were probably much lower than they could have been. However, these preliminary findings demonstrate that substantial costs can result from misdiagnoses caused by laboratory cross-contamination. Additional research with a larger sample size is warranted. Limitations to the Study This study included only three patients and did not include estimates of indirect and intangible costs. Since these costs largely affect the patient, we likely underestimated the effects of TB misdiagnosis on patients. Although the consequences were not collected formally, the patients had negative indirect or intangible consequences attributable to the misdiagnoses. The hospitalization of patient 2 and patient 3 represented 13 and 15 days of lost productivity, respectively. In addition, patient 3 underwent a painful bone marrow biopsy Bone marrow biopsy A procedure in which cellular material is removed from the pelvis or breastbone and examined under a microscope to look for the presence of abnormal blood cells characteristic of specific forms of leukemia and lymphoma. to rule out TB involvement of the bone. At the county correctional facility, patient 3 was placed in solitary confinement solitary confinement n. the placement of a prisoner in a Federal or state prison in a cell away from other prisoners, usually as a form of internal penal discipline, but occasionally to protect the convict from other prisoners or to prevent the prisoner from causing after testing positive for an illegal substance because of a false-positive reaction false-positive reaction n. An erroneous or mistakenly positive response. from rifampin rifampin (rĭfăm`pĭn), antibiotic used in the treatment of tuberculosis. It is also used to eliminate the meningococcus microorganism from carriers and to treat leprosy, or Hansen's disease. . The patients likely experienced emotional anxiety, fear, stress, and stigmatization stigmatization /stig·ma·ti·za·tion/ (stig?mah-ti-za´shun) 1. the developing of or being identified as possessing one or more stigmata. 2. the act or process of negatively labelling or characterizing another. ; they were also exposed to unnecessary treatment with potential risks for adverse effects (which did not occur). Another limitation is that personnel time costs were derived from staff's retrospective estimates of the time involved in various activities, which could have resulted in error. We excluded payers such as Medicare, Medicaid, or private insurers from our study. We showed where costs were incurred within the health-care sectors, but we did not address who actually paid for the resources. This is another area for future research. Averting Costs of TB Misdiagnoses This study demonstrates that substantial financial burden can be placed on the health-care system as a result of laboratory cross-contamination. The study also underscores the need for primary prevention of laboratory cross-contamination and the timely recognition of patients who have cross-contaminated M. tuberculosis cultures. Investigators have recommended actions that laboratories, clinicians, and health departments can take to minimize the negative consequences of false-positive M. tuberculosis cultures: standardizing laboratory procedures, establishing surveillance for identifying false-positive M. tuberculosis cultures, and prospectively screening for patients who may have false-positive cultures (1,4-6,9). We found that clinicians may play an important role in averting the costs associated with TB misdiagnosis resulting from laboratory cross-contamination. Of the five patients with cross-contaminated M. tuberculosis cultures, two were not diagnosed with TB because their physicians did not believe the false-positive results. Anti-TB therapy was discontinued after only 2 months for patient 2 because his TB care provider did not believe a TB diagnosis was clinically consistent. Thus interventions may be targeted at physicians who submit samples that test positive for M. tuberculosis. Selective genotyping of isolates from patients who have single positive M. tuberculosis cultures may also play a role in limiting the costs of TB misdiagnosis resulting from laboratory cross-contamination. For two of the three study patients who received misdiagnoses for active TB disease, neither the clinicians nor the laboratory personnel reported having suspected that the M. tuberculosis culture-positive result might be false; the errors were only detected through routine genotyping by the TB genotyping network. Actions taken to minimize the negative consequences of false-positive M. tuberculosis cultures would require healthcare resources. Even so, the costs of implementing these actions would likely be less than the costs of misdiagnosis, especially when intangible costs to the patient are considered. Increased efforts to avoid laboratory cross-contamination and to detect its occurrence as quickly as possible could help prevent unnecessary and potentially dangerous treatment, anguish for the patient, and financial costs to the health-care system.
Table 1. Cost inventory for three patients who received misdiagnoses
of active tuberculosis disease on the basis of laboratory cross-
contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis specimens (a)
Patient Public sector (b) Private sector (c)
Direct medical costs
TB medications Outpatient visits Outpatient visits
TB medications and PPD TB medications and PPD
DOT provision Tests and procedures
Tests and procedures Contact investigations
Contact investigations Hospitalizations
Hospitalizations
Direct nonmedical
costs
Case management (d)
Overhead (e)
(a) TB, tuberculosis; PPD, purified protein derivative of tuberculin;
DOT, directly observed therapy.
(b) Local and state public health departments, public health hospital
and laboratory, and county and state correctional facilities.
(c) Private physicians, hospitals, and laboratories.
(d) Health department case management and administrative support.
(e) Overhead costs, including rent, utilities, and supplies.
Table 2. Characteristics of patients who received misdiagnoses of
active tuberculosis disease resulting from laboratory
cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis specimens (a)
Characteristics Patient 1
Demographic information
Age at diagnosis (yrs) 59
Sex Female
Clinical information
Site of disease Lymphatic
Symptoms when examined Chronic cough, weight loss,
increasing fatigue, night sweats
(Sept 1998)
Radiology, initial CAT scan: lymphadenopathy, densities
in upper lobes suggestive of
infiltration or scarring
Pathology Lymph node biopsy positive for
lymphoma, chemotherapy started
TST result Negative
Underlying conditions and TB History of Hodgkin lymphoma and
risk factors treatment for active TB disease
in 1995, (c) non-U.S.-born
TB health care
TB health-care provider Private physician
Type of TB therapy Self-administered
Duration of TB therapy <1 month (started Dec 1998)
Hospitalization(s) following 5 days in private hospital
TB diagnosis (Jan 1999) with increasing
respiratory distress, treated
for community acquired pneumonia,
died of presumed progression of
non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Contact investigations
By public health department Not done
By hospital infection control Not done
Information on cross-contami-
nated specimen
Specimen type Right inguinal lymph node tissue
AFB smear result Negative
AFB culture result 1 colony at 60 days (reported Dec
1998), sensitive to INH, RIF, EMB,
Strep (PZA not tested)
NTGSN IS6110 10-band pattern (reported April
RFLP analysis 1999), RFLP match to an isolate
from a known TB patient
Case appraisal results (d)
Case diagnosis Lymphoma, nosocomial bacterial
pneumonia
Did laboratory cross-con- Likely
tamination occur?
Characteristics Patient 2
Demographic information
Age at diagnosis (yrs) 29
Sex Male
Clinical information
Site of disease Pulmonary
Symptoms when examined Abdominal discomfort, diarrhea,
flank pain, high fever, cough with
blood, delirium tremens (Nov 1998)
Radiology, initial Chest x-ray: right lower lobe
infiltrate, improved with
intravenous ceftriaxone
Pathology Not applicable
TST result Negative
Underlying conditions and TB History of chronic alcohol abuse and
risk factors cocaine use
TB health care
TB health-care provider Public health department TB clinic
Type of TB therapy Daily DOT by public health nurse
Duration of TB therapy <2 months (started Dec 1998)
Hospitalization(s) following 11 days in private hospital with
TB diagnosis acute gastritis secondary to alcohol
abuse (Jan 1999), TB therapy
discontinued secondary to increased
LFTs; 15 days at public health
hospital for TB management; TB
ruled out
Contact investigations
By public health department One household contact identified,
TST-negative
By hospital infection control Not done
Information on cross-contami-
nated specimen
Specimen type Sputum
AFB smear result Negative
AFB culture result 1 colony at 40 days (reported Dec
1998), slightly resistant to INH
NTGSN IS6110 9-band pattern (reported April
RFLP analysis 1999), RFLP match to an isolate
from a known TB patient
Case appraisal results (d)
Case diagnosis Community-acquired pneumonia
Did laboratory cross-con- Likely
tamination occur?
Characteristics Patient 3
Demographic information
Age at diagnosis (yrs) 38
Sex Male
Clinical information
Site of disease Soft tissue, right index finger
Symptoms when examined Infection of right index finger,
(b) great pain, lymphangitic
streaks up arm (Aug 1998)
Radiology, initial X-ray right hand: swelling over
right index DIP and PIP joints;
chest x-ray: normal
Pathology Not done/missing
TST result Negative
Underlying conditions and TB HIV positive, history of IVDU and
risk factors incarceration
TB health care
TB health-care provider Public health department TB clinic,
correctional facility clinic
Type of TB therapy Daily DOT by correctional facility
staff
Duration of TB therapy 11 months (treated for 2 weeks in
Oct 1998, restarted December 1998)
Hospitalization(s) following 8 days at public health hospital to
TB diagnosis start anti-TB therapy and rule out
pulmonary and bone involvement (Oct
1998); 5 days in correctional
facility infirmary
Contact investigations
By public health department Not done
By hospital infection control Not done
Information on cross-contami-
nated specimen
Specimen type Swab of finger cellulitis
AFB smear result Negative
AFB culture result "Rare" colonies at 42 days
(reported Sept 1998), INH resistant
NTGSN IS6110 16-band pattern (reported Oct 1999),
RFLP analysis RFLP match to laboratory control
strain H37Ra
Case appraisal results (d)
Case diagnosis Streptococcus cellulitis
Did laboratory cross-con- Likely
tamination occur?
(a) TST, tuberculin skin test; TB, tuberculosis; CAT, computerized
axial tomograpy; AFB, acid-fast bacilli; TGSN, National Tuberculosis
Genotyping and Surveillance Network; RFLP, restriction fragment length
polymorphism; INH, isoniazid; RIF, rifampin; EMB, ethambutol; Strep,
streptomycin; PZA, pyrazinamide; DOT, directly observed therapy; LFTs,
liver function tests; DIP, distal interphalangeal; PIP, proximal
interphalangeal; and IVDU, intravenous drug use.
(b) Infection of right index finger ultimately resulting in amputation;
specimen grew Streptococcus Group A.
(c) Patient treated for active TB disease in 1995, although there was
not enough evidence to verify the case or national surveillance.
(d) Case appraisals performed by a panel of three TB investigators
representing other NTGSN sentinel sites.
Table 3. Estimated costs for three patients who received misdiagnoses
of active tuberculosis disease on the basis of laboratory
cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis specimens (a),(b)
Estimated costs (U.S.$)
Cost category Patient 1 Patient 2 Patient 3 Total
Case management (c) 226 288 100 614
Outpatient visits 186 58 443 687
TB medications and PPD 175 606 5,061 5,842
DOT provision (d) 0 508 868 1,376
Tests and procedures 134 1,904 2,703 4,741
Contact investigations (e) 0 10 0 10
Hospitalizations (f) 312 6,905 12,131 19,348
Total 1,033 10,279 21,306 32,618
(a) Costs reported in 1999 U.S. dollars, rounded to the nearest whole
dollar. Costs adjusted to 1999 dollars by using the Medical Care group
of the Consumer Price Index.
(b) TB, tuberculosis; PPD, purified protein derivative of tuberculin;
DOT, directly observed therapy.
(c) Personnel time for health department case management and
administrative support.
(d) Personnel time to provide directly observed therapy
(e) Personnel time to perform contact testing.
(f) Daily inpatient bed rate and differential for transfer to isolation
room.
Acknowledgments The authors thank Alissa Scharf for assisting in laboratory data abstraction See abstraction. (data) data abstraction - Any representation of data in which the implementation details are hidden (abstracted). Abstract data types and objects are the two primary forms of data abstraction. and for subculturing and sending isolates for restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis; Debra Thimas for assisting in clinical data abstraction and organizing the panel review; Jo-Ann Dopp for managing the RFLP database at the Wadsworth Center; Frank Wilson and Zhiyuan Liu for judging potential cases of laboratory cross-contamination; Denise O'Connor for estimating cost data and assisting in obtaining patient clinical information; and John Bernardo, Al DeMaria, Barbara A. Ellis, and Jack T. Crawford for reviewing the manuscript. We are indebted in·debt·ed adj. Morally, socially, or legally obligated to another; beholden. [Middle English endetted, from Old French endette, past participle of endetter, to oblige to the nurses at the Massachusetts Tuberculosis Surveillance Area and the Boston Public Health Commission Tuberculosis Program for their assistance in identifying patients with potentially cross-contaminated specimens and obtaining patient interviews; and to the directors and staff of the 24 mycobacteriology laboratories for assisting in prospective screening for laboratory cross-contamination, laboratory data abstraction, and submitting isolates for RFLP analysis. This research was funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. Cooperative Agreement number U52/CCU 100516-16-1. This work was presented in part at the 97th International Conference of the American Thoracic Society American Thoracic Society (ATS ), established in 1905, is an independently incorporated, international, educational and scientific society, serving its 18,000 members world-wide who are dedicated in respiratory and critical care medicine. in May 2001 in San Francisco, California “San Francisco” redirects here. For other uses, see San Francisco (disambiguation). The City and County of San Francisco (EN IPA: [sænfrənˈsɪskoʊ] (Abstract 133441), and at the Northeast Tuberculosis Controllers Conference in October 2001 in Ocean City, Maryland Ocean City, sometimes known as OC, is an Atlantic Ocean resort town located in Worcester County, Maryland. Ocean City is widely known in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States and is a frequent destination for vacationers. (public health poster session A poster session is the juried presentation of research information by representatives of several research teams at a congress or conference with an academic or professional focus. These are particularly prominent at scientific conferences such as medical congresses. ). References (1.) Braden CR, Templeton GL, Stead stead n. 1. The place, position, or function properly or customarily occupied by another. 2. Advantage; service; purpose: "His personal relationship with the electorate stands in good stead" WW, Bates Bates , Katherine Lee 1859-1929. American educator and writer best known for her poem "America the Beautiful," written in 1893 and revised in 1904 and 1911. JH, Cave MD, Valway SE. Retrospective detection of laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis cultures with use of DNA fingerprint analysis. Clin Infect infect /in·fect/ (in-fekt´) 1. to invade and produce infection in. 2. to transmit a pathogen or disease to. in·fect v. 1. Dis 1997;24:35-40. (2.) Gutierrez MC, Vincent V, Aubert D, Bizet J, Galliot gal·li·ot n. Variant of galiot. O, Lebrun L, et al. Molecular fingerprinting fingerprinting Act of taking an impression of a person's fingerprint. Because each person's fingerprints are unique, fingerprinting is used as a method of identification, especially in police investigations. of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and risk factors for tuberculosis transmission in Paris, France, and surrounding area. J Clin Microbiol 1998;36:486-92. (3.) Nivin B, Fujiwara PI, Hannifin J, Kreiswirth BN. Cross-contamination with Mycobacterium tuberculosis: an epidemiological and laboratory investigation. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 1998;19:500-3. (4.) Burman W J, Reves RR. Review of false-positive cultures for Mycobacterium tuberculosis and recommendations for avoiding unnecessary treatment. Clin Infect Dis 2000;31:1390-5. (5.) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Misdiagnoses of tuberculosis resulting from laboratory cross-contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis cultures--New Jersey, 1998. MMWR MMWR Morbidity & Mortality Weekly Report Epidemiology A news bulletin published by the CDC, which provides epidemiologic data–eg, statistics on the incidence of AIDS, rabies, rubella, STDs and other communicable diseases, causes of mortality–eg, Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2000;49:413-6. (6.) Small PM, McClenny NB, Singh SP, Schoolnik QK, Tompkins LS, Mickelsen PA. Molecular strain typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to confirm cross-contamination in the mycobacteriology laboratory and modification of procedures to minimize occurrence of false-positive cultures. J Clin Microbiol 1993;31:1677-82. (7.) Small PM, Hopewell PC, Singh SP, Paz A, Parsonnet J, Ruston DC, et al. The epidemiology of tuberculosis in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden : a population-based study using conventional and molecular methods. N Engl J Med 1994;330:1703-9. (8.) Torrea G, Offredo C, Simonet M, Gicquel B, Berche P, Pierre-Audigier C. Evaluation of tuberculosis transmission in a community by 1 year of systematic typing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis clinical isolates. J Clin Microbiol 1996;34:1043-9. (9.) Frieden TR, Woodley CL, Crawford JT, Lew D, Dooley SM. The molecular epidemiology molecular epidemiology Molecular medicine An evolving field that combines the tools of standard epidemiology–case studies, questionnaires and monitoring of exposure to external factors with the tools of molecular biology–eg, restriction endonucleases, of tuberculosis in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. : the importance of nosocomial nosocomial /noso·co·mi·al/ (nos?o-ko´me-il) pertaining to or originating in a hospital. nos·o·co·mi·al adj. 1. Of or relating to a hospital. 2. transmission and laboratory error. Tuber tuber, enlarged tip of a rhizome (underground stem) that stores food. Although much modified in structure, the tuber contains all the usual stem parts—bark, wood, pith, nodes, and internodes. Lung Dis 1996;77:407-13. (10.) van Deutekom H, Gerritsen JJJ JJJ Julian Date (format) JJJ J. Jonah Jameson (Spiderman character) JJJ Juke Joint Jezebel (KMFDM song) JJJ Japanese Jiu-Jitsu JJJ Jay-Jay Johnson , van Soolingen D, van Ameijden EJC EJC European Journalism Centre (Maastricht, Netherlands) EJC European Jewish Congress EJC European Journal of Cancer EJC Electronic Journal of Communication EJC Equal Justice Coalition EJC European Junior Championships , van Embden JDA JDA Japan Defense Agency JDA Joint Development Agreement JDA Janne da Arc (band) JDA Joint Duty Assignment JDA Jerusalem Development Authority JDA Jovian Detention Authority (gaming) , Coutinho RA. A molecular epidemiological approach to studying the transmission of tuberculosis in Amsterdam. Clin Infect Dis 1997;25:1071-7. (11.) Chaves F, Dronda F, Cave MD, Alonso-Sanz M, Gonzalez-Lopez A, Eisenach KD, et al. A longitudinal study longitudinal study a chronological study in epidemiology which attempts to establish a relationship between an antecedent cause and a subsequent effect. See also cohort study. of transmission of tuberculosis in a large prison population. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1997;155:719-25. (12.) Dunlap NE, Harris RH, Benjamin WH, Harden hard·en v. hard·ened, hard·en·ing, hard·ens v.tr. 1. To make hard or harder. 2. To enable to withstand physical or mental hardship. 3. JW, Hafner D. Laboratory contamination of Mycobacterium tuberculosis cultures. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1995;152:1702-4. (13.) van Embden JDA, Cave MD, Crawford JT, Dale JW, Eisenach KD, Gicquel B, et al. Strain identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by DNA fingerprinting DNA fingerprinting or DNA profiling, any of several similar techniques for analyzing and comparing DNA from separate sources, used especially in law enforcement to identify suspects from hair, blood, semen, or other biological materials found at : recommendations for a standardized standardized pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures. standardized morbidity rate see morbidity rate. standardized mortality rate see mortality rate. methodology. J Clin Microbioi 1993;31:406-9. (14.) Kamerbeek J, Schouls L, Kolk A, van Agterveld M, van Soolingen D, Kuijper S, et al. Simultaneous detection and strain differentiation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis for diagnosis and epidemiology. J Clin Microbiol 1997;35:907-14. (15.) Brown RE, Miller B, Taylor WR, Palmer C, Bosco L, Nicola RM, et al. Health-care expenditures for tuberculosis in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . Arch Intern intern /in·tern/ (in´tern) a medical graduate serving in a hospital preparatory to being licensed to practice medicine. in·tern or in·terne n. Med 1995;155:1595-600. Jill M. Northrup, * Ann C. Miller, * Edward Nardell, * ([dagger]) Sharon Sharnprapai, * Sue Etkind, * Jeffrey Driscoll, ([double dagger double dagger n. A reference mark ( ) used in printing and writing. Also called diesis.Noun 1. ]) Michael McGarry Michael McGarry (born May 17, 1965) was a successful New Zealand soccer player who frequently represented his country in the 1980s and 90s. Another Michael McGarry was a native of Ballaghaderreen, County Roscommon, Ireland. , ([double dagger]) Harry W. Taber, ([double dagger]) Paul Elvin, * Noreen L. Quails, ([section]) and Christopher R. Braden * Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts “Boston” redirects here. For other uses, see Boston (disambiguation). Boston is the capital and most populous city of Massachusetts.[3] The largest city in New England, Boston is considered the unofficial economic and cultural center of the entire New , USA; ([dagger]) Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. , Boston, Massachusetts, USA; ([double dagger]) New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of State Department of Health, Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York, USA; and ([section]) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Ms. Northrup is an epidemiologist in the Division of Tuberculosis Prevention and Control at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. Her research interests include molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis. Address for correspondence: Jill M. Northrup, Division of Tuberculosis Prevention and Control, State Laboratory Institute, 305 South Street, Boston, MA 02130, USA; fax: 617-983-6990; e-mail: Jill.Northrup@State.MA.US |
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