Giant rats detect TB more accurately than commonly used techniques

By ANI
Wednesday, December 15, 2010

WASHINGTON - A new study found that trained giant African rats increased positive TB detection rates by 44 percent over microscopy, the most commonly-used technique for diagnosing TB.

The study, utilizing trained giant African pouched rats, analyzed sputum samples of 10,523 patients from five Direct Observation Treatment Short-Course (DOTS) centers in Tanzania.

The samples were first analyzed through microscopy by technicians at the DOTS center then provided to Anti-Persoonsmijnen Ontmijnende Product Ontwikkeling (APOPO) in Tanzania for second-line analysis by the rats.

While traditional microscopic analysis found 13.3 percent of patients to be TB-positive, second-line screening by the rats revealed 620 new TB-positive patients.

“Using sniffer rats to detect TB seems medieval but our study shows it works, providing an inexpensive, accurate, quick diagnostic,” said lead investigator Alan Poling, Western Michigan University.

Ten giant African pouched rats (Cricetomys gambianus) were trained to screen sputum samples. They were rewarded with banana for pausing at sputum samples known to contain M. tuberculosis but not for pausing at other sputum samples.

Through such training, they learned to pause reliably only at samples that were positive for TB. The status of samples with respect to microscopy was known and the rats were rewarded with food when they kept their nose in a hole above a TB-positive sample for at least 5 seconds, which defines an indicator response.

23,101 sputum samples from 10,523 patients were screened by DOTS center microscopists, and then by the rats. The DOTS center microscopists found 2,487 positive sputum samples, taken from 1,403 different patients.

The rats as a group identified 2,274 of these samples and 1,335 of these patients as TB-positive. The rats also identified as TB-positive 3,012 DOTS-negative samples and 1,418 DOTS-negative patients.

Analysis of smears by APOPO’s microscopists confirmed the presence of M. tuberculosis in 927 of these smears, which came from 620 different patients. Thus, the use of rats in simulated second-line screening increased the new-case detection rate by 44pc.

The findings have been published in the December issue of the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. (ANI)

Filed under: Science and Technology

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