%0 Journal Article %T Sensitivity of direct versus concentrated sputum smear microscopy in HIV-infected patients suspected of having pulmonary tuberculosis %A Adithya Cattamanchi %A David W Dowdy %A J Lucian Davis %A William Worodria %A Samuel Yoo %A Moses Joloba %A John Matovu %A Philip C Hopewell %A Laurence Huang %J BMC Infectious Diseases %D 2009 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2334-9-53 %X We performed a prospective, blinded evaluation of direct and concentrated Ziehl-Neelsen smear microscopy on a single early-morning sputum sample in HIV-infected patients with > 2 weeks of cough hospitalized in Kampala, Uganda. Direct and concentrated smear results were compared with results of Lowenstein-Jensen culture.Of 279 participants, 170 (61%) had culture-confirmed TB. The sensitivity of direct and concentrated smear microscopy was not significantly different (51% vs. 52%, difference 1%, 95% confidence interval (CI): [-7%, 10%], p = 0.88). However, when results of both direct and concentrated smears were considered together, sensitivity was significantly increased compared with either method alone (64%, 95% CI: [56%, 72%], p < 0.01 for both comparisons) and was similar to that of direct smear results from consecutive (spot and early-morning) specimens (64% vs. 63%, difference 1%, 95% CI: [-6%, 8%], p = 0.85). Among 109 patients with negative cultures, one had a positive direct smear and 12 had positive concentrated smears (specificity 99% vs. 89%, difference 10%, 95% CI: [2%, 18%], p = 0.003). Of these 13 patients, 5 (38%) had improved on TB therapy after two months.Sputum concentration did not increase the sensitivity of light microscopy for TB diagnosis in this HIV-infected population. Given the resource requirements for sputum concentration, additional studies using maximal blinding, high-quality direct microscopy, and a rigorous gold standard should be conducted before universally recommending this technique.Direct sputum smear microscopy is the cornerstone of tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis worldwide [1]. Direct smear microscopy is rapid, inexpensive [2-4], highly specific [5-7], and capable of identifying the most infectious cases of TB [7-9], but its sensitivity is limited, particularly in those with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infection [10-13]. Processing of sputum with subsequent concentration by centrifugation or sedimentation may increase the %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2334/9/53