Kimberly D. McCarthy
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Featured researches published by Kimberly D. McCarthy.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010
Kevin P. Cain; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Charles M. Heilig; Patama Monkongdee; Theerawit Tasaneeyapan; Nong Kanara; Michael E. Kimerling; Phalkun Chheng; Sopheak Thai; Borann Sar; Praphan Phanuphak; Nipat Teeratakulpisarn; Nittaya Phanuphak; Nguyen Huy Dung; Hoang Thi Quy; Le Hung Thai; Jay K. Varma
BACKGROUND Tuberculosis screening is recommended for people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection to facilitate early diagnosis and safe initiation of antiretroviral therapy and isoniazid preventive therapy. No internationally accepted, evidence-based guideline addresses the optimal means of conducting such screening, although screening for chronic cough is common. METHODS We consecutively enrolled people with HIV infection from eight outpatient clinics in Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam. For each patient, three samples of sputum and one each of urine, stool, blood, and lymph-node aspirate (for patients with lymphadenopathy) were obtained for mycobacterial culture. We compared the characteristics of patients who received a diagnosis of tuberculosis (on the basis of having one or more specimens that were culture-positive) with those of patients who did not have tuberculosis to derive an algorithm for screening and diagnosis. RESULTS Tuberculosis was diagnosed in 267 (15%) of 1748 patients (median CD4+ T-lymphocyte count, 242 per cubic millimeter; interquartile range, 82 to 396). The presence of a cough for 2 or 3 weeks or more during the preceding 4 weeks had a sensitivity of 22 to 33% for detecting tuberculosis. The presence of cough of any duration, fever of any duration, or night sweats lasting 3 or more weeks in the preceding 4 weeks was 93% sensitive and 36% specific for tuberculosis. In the 1199 patients with any of these symptoms, a combination of two negative sputum smears, a normal chest radiograph, and a CD4+ cell count of 350 or more per cubic millimeter helped to rule out a diagnosis of tuberculosis, whereas a positive diagnosis could be made only for the 113 patients (9%) with one or more positive sputum smears; mycobacterial culture was required for most other patients. CONCLUSIONS In persons with HIV infection, screening for tuberculosis should include asking questions about a combination of symptoms rather than only about chronic cough. It is likely that antiretroviral therapy and isoniazid preventive therapy can be started safely in people whose screening for all three symptoms is negative, whereas diagnosis in most others will require mycobacterial culture.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2009
Patama Monkongdee; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Kevin P. Cain; Theerawit Tasaneeyapan; Nguyen Huy Dung; Nguyen Thi Ngoc Lan; Nguyen Thi Bich Yen; Nipat Teeratakulpisarn; Nibondh Udomsantisuk; Charles M. Heilig; Jay K. Varma
RATIONALE The World Health Organization recently revised its recommendations for tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis in people with HIV. Most studies cited to support these policies involved HIV-uninfected patients and only evaluated sputum specimens. OBJECTIVES To evaluate the performance of acid-fast bacilli smear and mycobacterial culture on sputum and nonsputum specimens for TB diagnosis in a cross-sectional survey of HIV-infected patients. METHODS In Thailand and Vietnam, we enrolled people with HIV regardless of signs or symptoms. Enrolled patients provided three sputum, one urine, one stool, one blood, and, for patients with palpable peripheral adenopathy, one lymph node aspirate specimen for acid-fast bacilli microscopy and mycobacterial culture on solid and broth-based media. We classified any patient with at least one specimen culture positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis as having TB. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Of 1,060 patients enrolled, 147 (14%) had TB. Of 126 with pulmonary TB, the incremental yield of performing a third sputum smear over two smears was 2% (95% confidence interval, 0-6), 90 (71%) patients were detected on broth-based culture of the first sputum specimen, and an additional 21 (17%) and 12 (10%) patients were diagnosed with the second and third specimens cultured. Of 82 lymph nodes cultured, 34 (42%) grew M. tuberculosis. In patients with two negative sputum smears, broth-based culture of three sputum specimens had the highest yield of any testing strategy. CONCLUSIONS In people with HIV living in settings where mycobacterial culture is not routinely available to all patients, a third sputum smear adds little to the diagnosis of TB. Broth-based culture of three sputum specimens diagnoses most TB cases, and lymph node aspiration provides the highest incremental yield of any nonpulmonary specimen test for TB.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2009
Keerataya Ngamlert; Chalinthorn Sinthuwattanawibool; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Hojoon Sohn; Angela M. Starks; Photjanart Kanjanamongkolsiri; Rapeepan Anekvorapong; Theerawit Tasaneeyapan; Patama Monkongdee; Lois Diem; Jay K. Varma
Objectives Broth‐based culture (BBC) systems are increasingly being used to detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) in resource‐limited. We evaluated the performance, time to detection and cost of the Capilia TB identification test from broth cultures positive for acid‐fast bacilli (AFB) in Thailand.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2003
Peter D. McElroy; Karen Southwick; Ellen R. Fortenberry; Elizabeth Levine; Lois Diem; Charles L. Woodley; Paula M. Williams; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Renee Ridzon; Peter A. Leone
We investigated a cluster of patients with tuberculosis (TB) in North Carolina and determined the extent of transmission of 1 strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. A retrospective cohort study was conducted. Homeless shelter attendance and medical records for 1999 and 2000 were reviewed. The period of exposure to M. tuberculosis was determined, and shelter residents were offered TB screening. DNA fingerprinting was performed on 72 M. tuberculosis isolates. In addition to the initial index cluster of 9 patients, another 16 patients were identified. Isolates of M. tuberculosis from all 25 patients shared a matching DNA fingerprint pattern. All but 1 patient was male, 22 (88%) were African American, and 14 (56%) were human immunodeficiency virus-infected. An epidemiological link to a single shelter was identified for all but 1 patient. Earlier recognition of this shelter as a site of M. tuberculosis transmission could have been facilitated through innovative approaches to contact investigation and through genetic typing of isolates.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2012
Kimberly D. McCarthy; Kevin P. Cain; Kevin L. Winthrop; Nibondh Udomsantisuk; Nguyen Trong Lan; Borann Sar; Michael E. Kimerling; Nong Kanara; Lut Lynen; Patama Monkongdee; Theerawit Tasaneeyapan; Jay K. Varma
RATIONALE Although nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) are widely documented as a cause of illness among HIV-infected people in the developed world, studies describing the prevalence of NTM disease among HIV-infected people in most resource-limited settings are rare. OBJECTIVES To evaluate the prevalence of mycobacterial disease in HIV-infected patients in Southeast Asia. METHODS We enrolled people with HIV from three countries in Southeast Asia and collected pulmonary and extrapulmonary specimens to evaluate the prevalence of mycobacterial disease. We adapted American Thoracic Society/Infectious Disease Society of America guidelines to classify patients into NTM pulmonary disease, NTM pulmonary disease suspects, NTM disseminated disease, and no NTM categories. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS In Cambodia, where solid media alone was used, NTM was rare. Of 1,060 patients enrolled in Thailand and Vietnam, where liquid culture was performed, 124 (12%) had tuberculosis and 218 (21%) had NTM. Of 218 patients with NTM, 66 (30%) were classified as NTM pulmonary disease suspects, 9 (4%) with NTM pulmonary disease, and 10 (5%) with NTM disseminated disease. The prevalence of NTM disease was 2% (19 of 1,060). Of 51 patients receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART), none had NTM disease compared with 19 (2%) of 1,009 not receiving ART. CONCLUSIONS Although people with HIV frequently have sputum cultures positive for NTM, few meet a strict case definition for NTM disease. Consistent with previous studies, ART was associated with lower odds of having NTM disease. Further studies of NTM in HIV-infected individuals in tuberculosis-endemic countries are needed to develop and validate case definitions.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2010
Jay K. Varma; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Theerawit Tasaneeyapan; Patama Monkongdee; Michael E. Kimerling; Eng Buntheoun; Delphine Sculier; Chantary Keo; Praphan Phanuphak; Nipat Teeratakulpisarn; Nibondh Udomsantisuk; Nguyen Huy Dung; Nguyen Trong Lan; Nguyen Thi Bich Yen; Kevin P. Cain
Bloodstream infections (BSIs) are a major cause of illness in HIV-infected persons. To evaluate prevalence of and risk factors for BSIs in 2,009 HIV-infected outpatients in Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam, we performed a single Myco/F Lytic blood culture. Fifty-eight (2.9%) had a clinically significant BSI (i.e., a blood culture positive for an organism known to be a pathogen). Mycobacterium tuberculosis accounted for 31 (54%) of all BSIs, followed by fungi (13 [22%]) and bacteria (9 [16%]). Of patients for whom data were recorded about antiretroviral therapy, 0 of 119 who had received antiretroviral therapy for ≥14 days had a BSI, compared with 3% of 1,801 patients who had not. In multivariate analysis, factors consistently associated with BSI were fever, low CD4+ T-lymphocyte count, abnormalities on chest radiograph, and signs or symptoms of abdominal illness. For HIV-infected outpatients with these risk factors, clinicians should place their highest priority on diagnosing tuberculosis.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2008
Patjuban Hemhongsa; Theerawit Tasaneeyapan; Witaya Swaddiwudhipong; Junya Danyuttapolchai; Kanoknart Pisuttakoon; Somsak Rienthong; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Melissa J. Varma; Jacqueline Whitmore; Jay K. Varma
Objective To measure the burden and improve management of tuberculosis (TB), HIV‐associated TB and MDR TB in Tak Province, Thailand, which borders Myanmar.
International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease | 2013
G. E. Oramasionwu; Charles M. Heilig; N. Udomsantisuk; Michael E. Kimerling; B. Eng; H. D. Nguyen; S. Thai; C. Keo; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Jay K. Varma; Kevin P. Cain
BACKGROUND Delayed diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) increases mortality. OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether stool culture improves the diagnosis of TB in people living with the human immunodeficiency virus (PLHIV). DESIGN We analysed cross-sectional data of TB diagnosis in PLHIV in Cambodia, Thailand and Viet Nam. Logistic regression was used to assess the association between positive stool culture and TB, and to calculate the incremental yield of stool culture. RESULTS A total of 1693 PLHIV were enrolled with a stool culture result. Of 228 PLHIV with culture-confirmed TB from any site, 101 (44%) had a positive stool culture; of these, 91 (90%) had pulmonary TB (PTB). After adjusting for confounding factors, a positive stool culture was associated with smear-negative (odds ratio [OR] 26, 95% confidence interval [CI] 12-58), moderately smear-positive (OR 60, 95%CI 23-159) and highly smear-positive (OR 179, 95%CI 59-546) PTB compared with no PTB. No statistically significant association existed with extra-pulmonary TB compared with no extra-pulmonary TB (OR 2, 95%CI 1-5). The incremental yield of one stool culture above two sputum cultures (5%, 95%CI 3-8) was comparable to an additional sputum culture (7%, 95%CI 4-11). CONCLUSION Nearly half of the PLHIV with TB had a positive stool culture that was strongly associated with PTB. Stool cultures may be used to diagnose TB in PLHIV.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Surbhi Modi; Joseph S. Cavanaugh; Ray W. Shiraishi; Heather Alexander; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Barbara Burmen; Hellen Muttai; Chad M. Heilig; Allyn K. Nakashima; Kevin P. Cain
Objective To assess the performance of symptom-based screening for tuberculosis (TB), alone and with chest radiography among people living with HIV (PLHIV), including pregnant women, in Western Kenya. Design Prospective cohort study Methods PLHIV from 15 randomly-selected HIV clinics were screened with three clinical algorithms [World Health Organization (WHO), Ministry of Health (MOH), and “Improving Diagnosis of TB in HIV-infected persons” (ID-TB/HIV) study], underwent chest radiography (unless pregnant), and provided two or more sputum specimens for smear microscopy, liquid culture, and Xpert MTB/RIF. Performance of clinical screening was compared to laboratory results, controlling for the complex design of the survey. Results Overall, 738 (85.6%) of 862 PLHIV enrolled were included in the analysis. Estimated TB prevalence was 11.2% (95% CI, 9.9–12.7). Sensitivity of the three screening algorithms was similar [WHO, 74.1% (95% CI, 64.1–82.2); MOH, 77.5% (95% CI, 68.6–84.5); and ID-TB/HIV, 72.5% (95% CI, 60.9–81.7)]. Sensitivity of the WHO algorithm was significantly lower among HIV-infected pregnant women [28.2% (95% CI, 14.9–46.7)] compared to non-pregnant women [78.3% (95% CI, 67.3–86.4)] and men [77.2% (95% CI, 68.3–84.2)]. Chest radiography increased WHO algorithm sensitivity and negative predictive value to 90.9% (95% CI, 86.4–93.9) and 96.1% (95% CI, 94.4–97.3), respectively, among asymptomatic men and non-pregnant women. Conclusions Clinical screening missed approximately 25% of laboratory-confirmed TB cases among all PLHIV and more than 70% among HIV-infected pregnant women. National HIV programs should evaluate the feasibility of laboratory-based screening for TB, such as a single Xpert MTB/RIF test for all PLHIV, especially pregnant women, at enrollment in HIV services.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Joseph S. Cavanaugh; Surbhi Modi; Susan Musau; Kimberly D. McCarthy; Heather Alexander; Barbara Burmen; Charles M. Heilig; Ray W. Shiraishi; Kevin P. Cain
Background Diagnosis followed by effective treatment of tuberculosis (TB) reduces transmission and saves lives in persons living with HIV (PLHIV). Sputum smear microscopy is widely used for diagnosis, despite limited sensitivity in PLHIV. Evidence is needed to determine the optimal diagnostic approach for these patients. Methods From May 2011 through June 2012, we recruited PLHIV from 15 HIV treatment centers in western Kenya. We collected up to three sputum specimens for Ziehl-Neelsen (ZN) and fluorescence microscopy (FM), GeneXpert MTB/RIF (Xpert), and culture, regardless of symptoms. We calculated the incremental yield of each test, stratifying results by CD4 cell count and specimen type; data were analyzed to account for complex sampling. Results From 778 enrolled patients, we identified 88 (11.3%) laboratory-confirmed TB cases. Of the 74 cases who submitted 2 specimens for microscopy and Xpert testing, ZN microscopy identified 25 (33.6%); Xpert identified those plus an additional 18 (incremental yield = 24.4%). Xpert testing of spot specimens identified 48 (57.0%) of 84 cases; whereas Xpert testing of morning specimens identified 50 (66.0%) of 76 cases. Two Xpert tests detected 22/24 (92.0%) TB cases with CD4 counts <100 cells/μL and 30/45 (67.0%) of cases with CD4 counts ≥100 cells/μl. Conclusions In PLHIV, Xpert substantially increased diagnostic yield compared to smear microscopy and had the highest yield when used to test morning specimens and specimens from PLHIV with CD4 count <100 cells/μL. TB programs unable to replace smear microscopy with Xpert for all symptomatic PLHIV should consider targeted replacement and using morning specimens.