Nosocomial Tuberculosis Exposure Events in the Era of Nucleic Acid Amplification Testing: A Root Cause Analysis.

Nosocomial Tuberculosis Exposure Events in the Era of Nucleic Acid Amplification Testing: A Root Cause Analysis.

Publication date: Mar 20, 2026

Despite the availability of rapid tuberculosis (TB) nucleic acid amplification (NAA) testing, prevention of TB transmission within healthcare facilities remains a challenge due to ongoing difficulties in promptly isolating infectious TB cases upon hospitalization. We reviewed all hospitalized sputum culture-positive TB patients who were not immediately placed in airborne isolation before anti-TB treatment at a high caseload medical center in Taiwan during 2016-2019, and applied root cause analysis to systematically identify structural barriers to prompt isolation. Among 235 cases, 95 (40. 4%) had non-suggestive chest radiography (CXR) findings (Category 1), 62 (26. 4%) had suggestive findings but sputum testing was delayed (≥3 days; Category 2), and 78 (33. 2%) had timely sputum testing but delayed positive results (Category 3,). In Category 1, 52. 6% later developed typical CXR findings. In Category 2, 72. 6% had misread CXRs and 27. 4% had delayed review. In Category 3 (65. 4% had sputum result turnaround time >3 days), TB-NAA test was not done in 24 (30. 8%) patients (1 smear-positive and 23 smear-negative). Of the 13 false-negative TB-NAA cases, only one had repeat NAA testing. Prompt isolation requires clinical alertness, accurate CXR interpretations, frontline TB-NAA, and repeat testing when suspicion persists despite negative results.

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Concepts Keywords
Infectious Delay diagnosis
Radiography Nosocomial infection
Taiwan Sputum turn-around time
Tuberculosis

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
drug DRUGBANK 1-naphthaleneacetic acid
disease MESH Nosocomial infection

Original Article

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