Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Richard Meldau is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Richard Meldau.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2009

Within-Subject Variability and Boosting of T-Cell Interferon-γ Responses after Tuberculin Skin Testing

Richard van Zyl-Smit; Madhukar Pai; Kwaku Peprah; Richard Meldau; Jackie Kieck; June Juritz; Motasim Badri; Alimuddin Zumla; Leonardo Antonio Sechi; Eric D. Bateman; Keertan Dheda

RATIONALE The optimal strategy for the diagnosis of latent tuberculosis infection is controversial. Adoption of a two-step strategy (tuberculin skin test [TST] followed by an IFN-gamma release assay [IGRA], compared with an IGRA alone), may be limited by TST-mediated boosting of subsequent IGRA responses. Assessment of within-subject IGRA variability will aid in establishing thresholds for conversions and reversions, and interpretation of serial testing results. OBJECTIVES To determine short-term IGRA variability and the impact of TST on subsequent IGRA results. METHODS Within-subject variability and TST-mediated boosting of IGRA responses were evaluated in 26 South African participants with varying exposure risk. IGRAs (T-SPOT.TB, QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube [QuantiFERON-TB-GIT], PPD, and heparin-binding hemagglutinin) were repeated four times over 21 days pre-TST, and on Days 3, 7, 28, and 84 post-TST administration. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS All participants showed within-subject IGRA variability. Changes of +/-3 spots (T-SPOT.TB) or +/-80% from the mean IFN-gamma response (QuantiFERON-TB-GIT) over 3 weeks explained 95% of the variability. Spontaneous conversions/reversions occurred in 7 of 26 subjects (27%) (6 for T-SPOT.TB and 1 for QuantiFERON-TB-GIT [P = 0.049]) during the within-patient variability studies (pre-TST). After the TST eight subjects (33%) boosted above the defined baseline variability. By Day 7 post-TST, but not Day 3, 2 (12.5%) initially IGRA-negative test subjects converted. By contrast, boosting of PPD and heparin-binding hemagglutinin occurred by Day 3 post-TST. CONCLUSIONS When using a two-step screening strategy it appears safe to perform a QuantiFERON-TB-GIT or T-SPOT.TB IGRA within 3 days of performing the TST. A 3-spot or 80% IFN-gamma response variation, on either side of baseline values, explains 95% of the short-term variability and may be useful for interpreting conversions and reversions, and values close to the cut-point.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Clinical Utility of a Commercial LAM-ELISA Assay for TB Diagnosis in HIV-Infected Patients Using Urine and Sputum Samples

Keertan Dheda; Virginia Davids; Laura Lenders; Teri Roberts; Richard Meldau; Daphne Ling; Laurence Brunet; Richard van Zyl Smit; Jonathan C. Peter; Clare Green; Motasim Badri; Leonardo Antonio Sechi; Surendra Sharma; Michael Hoelscher; Rodney Dawson; Andrew Whitelaw; Jonathan M. Blackburn; Madhukar Pai; Alimuddin Zumla

Background The accurate diagnosis of TB in HIV-infected patients, particularly with advanced immunosuppression, is difficult. Recent studies indicate that a lipoarabinomannan (LAM) assay (Clearview-TB®-ELISA) may have some utility for the diagnosis of TB in HIV-infected patients; however, the precise subgroup that may benefit from this technology requires clarification. The utility of LAM in sputum samples has, hitherto, not been evaluated. Methods LAM was measured in sputum and urine samples obtained from 500 consecutively recruited ambulant patients, with suspected TB, from 2 primary care clinics in South Africa. Culture positivity for M. tuberculosis was used as the reference standard for TB diagnosis. Results Of 440 evaluable patients 120/387 (31%) were HIV-infected. Urine-LAM positivity was associated with HIV positivity (p = 0.007) and test sensitivity, although low, was significantly higher in HIV-infected compared to uninfected patients (21% versus 6%; p<0.001), and also in HIV-infected participants with a CD4 <200 versus >200 cells/mm3 (37% versus 0%; p = 0.003). Urine-LAM remained highly specific in all 3 subgroups (95%–100%). 25% of smear-negative but culture-positive HIV-infected patients with a CD4 <200 cells/mm3 were positive for urine-LAM. Sputum-LAM had good sensitivity (86%) but poor specificity (15%) likely due to test cross-reactivity with several mouth-residing organisms including actinomycetes and nocardia species. Conclusions These preliminary data indicate that in a high burden primary care setting the diagnostic usefulness of urine-LAM is limited, as a rule-in test, to a specific patient subgroup i.e. smear-negative HIV-infected TB patients with a CD4 count <200 cells/mm3, who would otherwise have required further investigation. However, even in this group sensitivity was modest. Future and adequately powered studies in a primary care setting should now specifically target patients with suspected TB who have advanced HIV infection.


European Respiratory Journal | 2012

Diagnostic accuracy of a urine lipoarabinomannan strip-test for TB detection in HIV-infected hospitalised patients

Jonathan G. Peter; Grant Theron; Richard van Zyl-Smit; Asheen Haripersad; Lynelle Mottay; Sarah Kraus; Anke Binder; Richard Meldau; Anneli Hardy; Keertan Dheda

Lack of point-of-care tests for tuberculosis (TB) result in diagnostic delay, and increased mortality and healthcare-related costs. The urine DetermineTM TB-LAM point-of-care strip-test was evaluated in 335 prospectively-recruited hospitalised patients with suspected TB-HIV co-infection (group 1) and from 88 HIV-infected hospitalised patients with non-TB diagnoses (group 2). Cut-off point-specific analyses were performed using: 1) a microbiological reference standard (culture positive versus negative); and 2) a composite reference standard (exclusion of patients with clinical-TB from the culture-negative group). Using the microbiological reference and the manufacturer-recommended grade-1 cut-off point, LAM sensitivity and specificity was 66% (95% CI 57–74%). By contrast, using the composite reference sensitivity was 60% (95% CI 53–67%) and specificity improved to 96% (95% CI 89–100%) (p=0.001). The same pattern was seen when the grade-2 cut-off point was used (specificity 75% versus 96%; p=0.01). In group two patients specificity was poor using the grade-1 cut-off point, but improved significantly when the grade-2 cut-off point was used (90% versus 99%; p=0.009). The grade-2 cut-off point also offered superior inter-reader reliability (p=0.002). Sensitivity was highest in those with a CD4 <200 cells per mL. LAM combined with smear-microscopy was able to rule-in TB in 71% of Mycobacterium tuberculosis culture-positive patients. This preliminary study indicates that the LAM strip-test may be a potentially useful rapid rule-in test for TB in hospitalised patients with advanced immunosuppression. The grade 2, but not the manufacturer-recommended grade 1 cut-off point, offered superior rule-in utility and inter-reader reliability. Larger studies to evaluate cut-off points and diagnostic accuracy are urgently required.


European Respiratory Journal | 2009

Utility of quantitative T-cell responses versus unstimulated interferon-γ for the diagnosis of pleural tuberculosis

K Dheda; R. van Zyl-Smit; Leonardo Antonio Sechi; Motasim Badri; Richard Meldau; S. Meldau; Greg Symons; Patricia L. Semple; Alice Maredza; Rodney Dawson; Helen Wainwright; Andrew Whitelaw; Y. Vallie; P. Raubenheimer; Eric D. Bateman; Alimuddin Zumla

The clinical utility of antigen-specific interferon (IFN)-γ release assays (IGRAs) using pleural mononuclear cells, for the diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB), requires clarification. We compared the diagnostic utility of unstimulated pleural IFN-γ levels with several pleural antigen-specific T-cell IGRAs (early secretory antigenic target-6 and culture filtrate protein-10 (T-SPOT.®TB, QuantiFERON®-TB Gold In-tube), purified protein derivative (PPD) and heparin-binding haemagglutinin (HBHA)) in 78 South African TB suspects. Test results were compared against a clinical score and a reference standard. Out of 74 evaluable subjects 48, seven and 19 had definite, probable and no TB, respectively. 11 (15%) out of 74 pleural samples (nine (19%) out of 48 of the definite TB cases) had total cell counts that were inadequate for T-cell processing. In the remaining 63 samples, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of different diagnostic methods were as follows. Maximal bioclinical score: 54, 89, 92 and 43%, respectively; T-SPOT.®TB: 86, 60, 84 and 64%, respectively; QuantiFERON®-TB Gold In-tube: 57, 80, 87 and 44%, respectively; HBHA-specific IGRA: 59, 31, 64 and 27%, respectively; PPD-specific IGRA: 81, 40, 76 and 46%, respectively; and pleural fluid unstimulated IFN-γ: 97, 100, 100 and 94%, respectively. Unstimulated IFN-γ was the most accurate test for distinguishing TB from non-TB effusions in a high-burden setting. The antigen-specific T-cell IGRAs were limited by suboptimal accuracy and the inability to isolate sufficient mononuclear cells to perform the assay.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Clinical Diagnostic Utility of IP-10 and LAM Antigen Levels for the Diagnosis of Tuberculous Pleural Effusions in a High Burden Setting

Keertan Dheda; Richard van-Zyl Smit; Leonardo Antonio Sechi; Motasim Badri; Richard Meldau; Gregory Symons; Hoosein Khalfey; Igshaan Carr; Alice Maredza; Rodney Dawson; Helen Wainright; Andrew Whitelaw; Eric D. Bateman; Alimuddin Zumla

Background Current tools for the diagnosis of tuberculosis pleural effusions are sub-optimal. Data about the value of new diagnostic technologies are limited, particularly, in high burden settings. Preliminary case control studies have identified IFN-γ-inducible-10kDa protein (IP-10) as a promising diagnostic marker; however, its diagnostic utility in a day-to-day clinical setting is unclear. Detection of LAM antigen has not previously been evaluated in pleural fluid. Methods We investigated the comparative diagnostic utility of established (adenosine deaminase [ADA]), more recent (standardized nucleic-acid-amplification-test [NAAT]) and newer technologies (a standardized LAM mycobacterial antigen-detection assay and IP-10 levels) for the evaluation of pleural effusions in 78 consecutively recruited South African tuberculosis suspects. All consenting participants underwent pleural biopsy unless contra-indicated or refused. The reference standard comprised culture positivity for M. tuberculosis or histology suggestive of tuberculosis. Principal Findings Of 74 evaluable subjects 48, 7 and 19 had definite, probable and non-TB, respectively. IP-10 levels were significantly higher in TB vs non-TB participants (p<0.0001). The respective outcomes [sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV %] for the different diagnostic modalities were: ADA at the 30 IU/L cut-point [96; 69; 90; 85], NAAT [6; 93; 67; 28], IP-10 at the 28,170 pg/ml ROC-derived cut-point [80; 82; 91; 64], and IP-10 at the 4035 pg/ml cut-point [100; 53; 83; 100]. Thus IP-10, using the ROC-derived cut-point, missed ∼20% of TB cases and mis-diagnosed ∼20% of non-TB cases. By contrast, when a lower cut-point was used a negative test excluded TB. The NAAT had a poor sensitivity but high specificity. LAM antigen-detection was not diagnostically useful. Conclusion Although IP-10, like ADA, has sub-optimal specificity, it may be a clinically useful rule-out test for tuberculous pleural effusions. Larger multi-centric studies are now required to confirm our findings.


Thorax | 2009

Quantitative lung T cell responses aid the rapid diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis

Keertan Dheda; R van Zyl-Smit; Richard Meldau; S. Meldau; Greg Symons; Hoosain Khalfey; N Govender; V Rosu; Leonardo Antonio Sechi; Alice Maredza; Patricia L. Semple; Andrew Whitelaw; Helen Wainwright; Motasim Badri; Rodney Dawson; Eric D. Bateman; Alimuddin Zumla

Background: The diagnosis of smear-negative pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) is problematic. There are limited data on the profile of alveolar TB antigen-specific T cells, and their utility for the rapid immunodiagnosis of pulmonary TB is unclear. Methods: Antigen-specific interferon γ (IFNγ) responses to the RD-1 antigens ESAT-6 and CFP-10 (T-SPOT.TB and QuantiFERON-TB-Gold-In-Tube), heparin-binding haemagglutinin and purified protein derivative were evaluated, using alveolar lavage cells, in 91 consecutively recruited South African patients suspected of having TB. Results: Of 85 evaluable patients (29% HIV+), 24, 11, 48 and 2 had definite TB, probable TB, non-TB and an uncertain diagnosis, respectively. Between 34% (T-SPOT.TB) and 41% (QuantiFERON-TB-Gold-In-Tube) of all test results were inconclusive. Failure of the positive control was significantly higher with the QuantiFERON-TB-Gold-In-Tube than with T-SPOT.TB (85% vs 46% of inconclusive results; p = 0.001). Using staphylococcal enterotoxin B, compared with phytohaemagglutinin, substantially reduced failure of the positive control (25% to 3%; p = 0.02). In evaluable samples, when the definite and non-TB groups were used for outcome analysis, the percentage sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value for T-SPOT.TB (⩾20 spots/million alveolar mononuclear cells) and QuantiFERON-TB-Gold-In-Tube (0.35 IU/ml) were 89, 94, 89 and 94% (n = 55) and 55, 86, 77 and 69% (n = 46), respectively. Rapid diagnosis of TB was achieved more frequently with T-SPOT.TB than with smear microscopy (14/24 (58%) vs. 7/24 (29%) of definite TB cases; p = 0.02). Heparin-binding haemagluttinin and purified protein derivative alveolar lymphocyte IFNγ responses had poor performance outcomes. Conclusion: Provided evaluable results are obtained, the RD-1, but not the heparin-binding haemagglutinin or purified protein derivative, alveolar lymphocyte IFNγ ELISPOT response is a useful rapid immunodiagnostic test for TB. However, test utility in high-burden settings may be limited by the high proportion of inconclusive results.


European Respiratory Journal | 2012

Do adjunct tuberculosis tests, when combined with Xpert MTB/RIF, improve accuracy and the cost of diagnosis in a resource-poor setting?

Grant Theron; Anil Pooran; Jonny Peter; Richard van Zyl-Smit; Hridesh Mishra; Richard Meldau; Greg Calligaro; Brian W. Allwood; Surendra Sharma; Rod Dawson; Keertan Dheda

Information regarding the utility of adjunct diagnostic tests in combination with Xpert MTB/RIF (Cepheid, Sunnyvale, CA, USA) is limited. We hypothesised adjunct tests could enhance accuracy and/or reduce the cost of tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis prior to MTB/RIF testing, and rule-in or rule-out TB in MTB/RIF-negative individuals. We assessed the accuracy and/or laboratory-associated cost of diagnosis of smear microscopy, chest radiography (CXR) and interferon-&ggr; release assays (IGRAs; T-SPOT-TB (Oxford Immunotec, Oxford, UK) and QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube (Cellestis, Chadstone, Australia)) combined with MTB/RIF for TB in 480 patients in South Africa. When conducted prior to MTB/RIF: 1) smear microscopy followed by MTB/RIF (if smear negative) had the lowest cost of diagnosis of any strategy investigated; 2) a combination of smear microscopy, CXR (if smear negative) and MTB/RIF (if imaging compatible with active TB) did not further reduce the cost per TB case diagnosed; and 3) a normal CXR ruled out TB in 18% of patients (57 out of 324; negative predictive value (NPV) 100%). When downstream adjunct tests were applied to MTB/RIF-negative individuals, radiology ruled out TB in 24% (56 out of 234; NPV 100%), smear microscopy ruled in TB in 21% (seven out of 24) of culture-positive individuals and IGRAs were not useful in either context. In resource-poor settings, smear microscopy combined with MTB/RIF had the highest accuracy and lowest cost of diagnosis compared to either technique alone. In MTB/RIF-negative individuals, CXR has poor rule-in value but can reliably rule out TB in approximately one in four cases. These data inform upon the programmatic utility of MTB/RIF in high-burden settings.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Comparison of Quantitative Techniques including Xpert MTB/RIF to Evaluate Mycobacterial Burden

Richard van Zyl-Smit; Anke Binder; Richard Meldau; Hridesh Mishra; Patricia L. Semple; Grant Theron; Jonathan C. Peter; Andrew Whitelaw; Suren K. Sharma; Robin M. Warren; Eric D. Bateman; Keertan Dheda

Introduction Accurate quantification of mycobacterial load is important for the evaluation of patient infectiousness, disease severity and monitoring treatment response in human and in-vitro laboratory models of disease. We hypothesized that newer techniques would perform as well as solid media culture to quantify mycobacterial burden in laboratory specimens. Methods We compared the turn-around-time, detection-threshold, dynamic range, reproducibility, relative discriminative ability, of 4 mycobacterial load determination techniques: automated liquid culture (BACTEC-MGIT-960), [3H]-uracil incorporation assays, luciferase-reporter construct bioluminescence, and quantitative PCR(Xpert -MTB/RIF) using serial dilutions of Mycobacterium bovis and Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37RV. Mycobacterial colony-forming-units(CFU) using 7H10-Middlebrook solid media served as the reference standard. Results All 4 assays correlated well with the reference standard, however, bioluminescence and uracil assays had a detection threshold ≥1×103 organisms. By contrast, BACTEC-MGIT-960 liquid culture, although only providing results in days, was user-friendly, had the lowest detection threshold (<10 organisms), the greatest discriminative ability (1 vs. 10 organisms; p = 0.02), and the best reproducibility (coefficient of variance of 2% vs. 38% compared to uracil incorporation; p = 0.02). Xpert-MTB/RIF correlated well with mycobacterial load, had a rapid turn-around-time (<2 hours), was user friendly, but had a detection limit of ∼100 organisms. Conclusions Choosing a technique to quantify mycobacterial burden for laboratory or clinical research depends on availability of resources and the question being addressed. Automated liquid culture has good discriminative ability and low detection threshold but results are only obtained in days. Xpert MTB/RIF provides rapid quantification of mycobacterial burden, but has a poorer discrimination and detection threshold.


European Respiratory Journal | 2011

Are interferon-γ release assays useful for diagnosing active tuberculosis in a high-burden setting?

D.I. Ling; Madhukar Pai; Virginia Davids; Laurence Brunet; Laura Lenders; Richard Meldau; Gregory Calligaro; Brian W. Allwood; R. van Zyl-Smit; Jonny Peter; Eric D. Bateman; Rodney Dawson; K Dheda

Although interferon-&ggr; release assays (IGRAs) are intended for diagnosing latent tuberculosis (TB), we hypothesised that in a high-burden setting: 1) the magnitude of the response when using IGRAs can distinguish active TB from other diagnoses; 2) IGRAs may aid in the diagnosis of smear-negative TB; and 3) IGRAs could be useful as rule-out tests for active TB. We evaluated the accuracy of two IGRAs (QuantiFERON®-TB Gold In-tube (QFT-GIT) and T-SPOT®.TB) in 395 patients (27% HIV-infected) with suspected TB in Cape Town, South Africa. IGRA sensitivity and specificity (95% CI) were 76% (68–83%) and 42% (36–49%) for QFT-GIT and 84% (77–90%) and 47% (40–53%) for T-SPOT®.TB, respectively. Although interferon-&ggr; responses were significantly higher in the TB versus non-TB groups (p<0.0001), varying the cut-offs did not improve discriminatory ability. In culture-negative patients, depending on whether those with clinically diagnosed TB were included or excluded from the analysis, the negative predictive value (NPV) of QFT-GIT, T-SPOT®.TB and chest radiograph in smear-negative patients varied between 85 and 89, 87 and 92, and 98% (for chest radiograph), respectively. Overall accuracy was independent of HIV status and CD4 count. In a high-burden setting, IGRAs alone do not have value as rule-in or -out tests for active TB. In smear-negative patients, chest radiography had better NPV even in HIV-infected patients.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Determinants of PCR performance (Xpert MTB/RIF), including bacterial load and inhibition, for TB diagnosis using specimens from different body compartments

Grant Theron; Jonny Peter; Greg Calligaro; Richard Meldau; Colleen Hanrahan; Hoosain Khalfey; Brian Matinyenya; Tapuwa E. Muchinga; Liezel Smith; Shaheen Pandie; Laura Lenders; Vinod Patel; Bongani M. Mayosi; Keertan Dheda

The determinants of Xpert MTB/RIF sensitivity, a widely used PCR test for the diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB) are poorly understood. We compared culture time-to-positivity (TTP; a surrogate of bacterial load), MTB/RIF TB-specific and internal positive control (IPC)-specific CT values, and clinical characteristics in patients with suspected TB who provided expectorated (n = 438) or induced sputum (n = 128), tracheal aspirates (n = 71), bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (n = 152), pleural fluid (n = 76), cerebral spinal fluid (CSF; n = 152), pericardial fluid (n = 131), or urine (n = 173) specimens. Median bacterial load (TTP in days) was the strongest associate of MTB/RIF positivity in each fluid. TTP correlated with CT values in pulmonary specimens but not extrapulmonary specimens (Spearmans coefficient 0.5043 versus 0.1437; p = 0.030). Inhibition affected a greater proportion of pulmonary specimens than extrapulmonary specimens (IPC CT > 34: 6% (47/731) versus 1% (4/381; p < 0.0001). Pulmonary specimens had greater load than extrapulmonary specimens [TTPs (interquartile range) of 11 (7–16) versus 22 (18–33.5) days; p < 0.0001]. HIV-infection was associated with a decreased likelihood of MTB/RIF-positivity in pulmonary specimens but an increased likelihood in extrapulmonary specimens. Mycobacterial load, which displays significant variation across different body compartments, is the main determinant of MTB/RIF-positivity rather than PCR inhibition. MTB/RIF CT is a poor surrogate of load in extrapulmonary specimens.

Collaboration


Dive into the Richard Meldau's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Grant Theron

Stellenbosch University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alimuddin Zumla

University College London

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jonny Peter

University of Cape Town

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anke Binder

University of Cape Town

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge