Bibliographic Info
Recommendation
Recommended in favor
Conditional
Certainty of evidence
Very low
In outpatient settings, WHO suggests using lateral flow urine lipoarabinomannan assay (LF-LAM) to assist in the diagnosis of active TB in HIV-positive adults, adolescents and children: irrespective of signs and symptoms of TB and with a CD4 cell count < 100
Notes and Remarks
a. The reviewed evidence and recommendations apply to the use of AlereLAM only, because other in-house LAM-based assays have not been adequately validated or used outside limited research settings. Any new or generic LAM-based assay should be subject to adequate validation in the settings of intended use. b. All patients with signs and symptoms of pulmonary TB who are capable of producing sputum should have as their initial diagnostic test at least one sputum specimen submitted for Xpert® MTB/RIF (Ultra) assay. This also includes children and adolescents living with HIV who are able to provide a sputum sample. c. These recommendations also apply to adolescents and children living with HIV, based on generalization of data from adults, while acknowledging very limited data for these population groups. d. LF-LAM should be used as an add-on to clinical judgement in combination with other tests. It should not be used as a replacement or triage test. More details are given in Annex 1. Algorithms for LF-LAM use.
Also Featured In
This recommendation also appears in the following guidelines:
WHO consolidated guidelines on tuberculosis: module 3: diagnosis – rapid diagnostics for tuberculosis detection: web annex 2. GRADE profiles
WHO consolidated guidelines on tuberculosis: module 3: diagnosis – rapid diagnostics for tuberculosis detection: web annex 2. GRADE profiles
WHO consolidated guidelines on tuberculosis: module 3: diagnosis – rapid diagnostics for tuberculosis detection: web annex 2. GRADE profiles
WHO consolidated guidelines on tuberculosis: module 3: diagnosis – rapid diagnostics for tuberculosis detection: web annex 2. GRADE profiles