Abstrak
Computer-assisted Chest Radiography Reading For Tuberculosis Screening In People Living With Diabetes Mellitus
R. C. Koesoemadinata, K. Kranzer, R. Livia, N. Susilawati, J. Annisa, N. N. M. Soetedjo, R. Ruslami, R. Philipsen, B. van Ginneken, R. D. Soetikno, R. van Crevel, B. Alisjahbana, P. C. Hill
Universitas Padjadjaran, The International Journal Of Tuberculosis And Lung Disease Volume 22, Number 9, 1 September 2018, https://dx.doi.org/10.5588/ijtld.17.0827
Bahasa Inggris
Universitas Padjadjaran, The International Journal Of Tuberculosis And Lung Disease Volume 22, Number 9, 1 September 2018, https://dx.doi.org/10.5588/ijtld.17.0827
CAD4TB v 5, Indonesia, triage tool
BACKGROUND: Diabetes mellitus is a significant risk factor for tuberculosis (TB). We evaluated the perfor mance of computer-aided detection for tuberculosis (CAD4TB) in people living with diabetes mellitus (PLWD) in Indonesia. METHODS: PLWD underwent symptom screening and chest X-ray (CXR); sputum was examined in those with positive symptoms and/or CXR. Digital CXRs were scored using CAD4TB and analysed retrospectively using clinical and microbiological diagnosis as a reference. The area under the receiver operator curve (AUC) of CAD4TB scores was determined, and an optimal threshold score established. Agreement between CAD4TB and the radiologist’s reading was determined. RESULTS: Among 346 included PLWD, seven (2.0%) had microbiologically confirmed and two (0.6%) had clinically diagnosed TB. The highest agreement of CAD4TB with radiologist reading was achieved using a threshold score of 70 (j ¼0.41, P , 0.001). The AUC for CAD4TB was 0.89 (95%CI 0.73–1.00). A threshold score of 65 for CAD4TB resulted in a sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of respectively 88.9% (95%CI 51.8–99.7), 88.5% (95%CI 84.6–91.7), 17.0% (95%CI 7.6–30.8) and 99.6% (95%CI 98.2–100). With this threshold, 48 (13.9%) individuals needed microbiological examination and no microbiologically confirmed cases were missed. CONCLUSIONS: CAD4TB has potential as a triage tool for TB screening in PLWD, thereby significantly reducing the need for microbiological examination.