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      Facing the crisis: improving the diagnosis of tuberculosis in the HIV era.

      1 ,
      The Journal of infectious diseases
      University of Chicago Press

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          Abstract

          Although the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection pandemic has had a catastrophic impact on tuberculosis (TB) control efforts, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, most of the fundamental concepts reflected in the directly observed treatment, short course (DOTS) strategy still hold true in the HIV era. What has changed, and dramatically, is the importance of speedy and accurate TB diagnosis and the difficulty of achieving this. The disproportionate amount of smear-negative disease in sub-Saharan Africa, which shoulders two-thirds of the global burden of HIV infection and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, has greatly complicated TB case detection and disease control. Now, 15 years after TB rates began to soar in countries where HIV infection is prevalent, we have learned that the conventional approach -- passively waiting for patients with advanced symptomatic disease to make their way to microscopy centers for diagnosis -- has disastrous consequences. Without better diagnostic tools for TB and effective strategies for their implementation, transmission will not be interrupted, mortality will not be checked, and TB will not be controlled in areas where HIV infection is prevalent. Fortunately, a number of technical opportunities exist for the creation of improved diagnostic tests. Developing and exploiting such tests to support TB control in HIV-infected populations is an urgent priority. A substantial public sector effort is under way to work in partnership with the biotechnology industry to accelerate progress toward that goal. In this article, we will define the need for better TB tests and describe technologies being developed to meet that need.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Infect Dis
          The Journal of infectious diseases
          University of Chicago Press
          0022-1899
          0022-1899
          Aug 15 2007
          : 196 Suppl 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics, Geneva, Switzerland. mark.perkins@finddiagnostics.org
          Article
          JID36838
          10.1086/518656
          17624822
          837529da-70c8-49d0-b485-4b290c3d8dba
          History

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