Scientists develop rapid blood test for TB

Q.  Which disease can now be diagnosed with a rapid blood test in just a few hours?
- Published on 29 Mar 17

a. Typhoid
b. Tetanus
c. TB
d. Diptheria

ANSWER: TB
 
Scientists develop rapid blood test for TBScientists have developed the first rapid blood test that can diagnose tuberculosis and measure the severity of the deadly infection within a few hours.

This is an advance that may help combat the worldwide epidemic.

Despite USD 6.6 billion spent for international tuberculosis (TB) care and prevention efforts, TB remains a major risk to human health.

This is particularly for the developing world and people with HIV infections.

Making matters worse, TB bacteria can lurk dormant in a person's lung tissue, often for decades, before spontaneously producing full-blown TB disease that can then spread to others.

World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that up to one-third of the world's population may have such dormant TB infections.

In the current front lines of TB testing, coughed-up sputum, blood culture tests, invasive lung and lymph biopsies, or spinal taps are the only way to diagnose TB.

The results can give false negatives, and these tests are further constrained because they can take days to weeks to get the results.

TB: Know More
  • In 2016, an estimated 10 million people worldwide still develop TB each year according to the WHO's most recent report, resulting in almost two million deaths.
  • TB remains a worldwide epidemic due to the lack of an effective TB vaccine, the rise in drug-resistant strains and the relatively poor performance of available TB diagnostics.
  • The new blood-based TB test outperforms all others currently on the market and takes just hours to complete.
  • This is critical since effective TB control requires that patients start treatment as soon as possible to reduce the risk of spreading TB.
  • This test also holds promise for rapid assessment of TB treatment, an important factor in reducing the development and spread of drug-resistant TB strains, researchers said.
  • Current TB assays often demonstrate reduced performance with HIV-positive TB patients or those with TB infections in non-lung tissues, and these patients can require tissue biopsies for diagnosis.

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