Author(s): CC Ward, SH Aliyu, M Gillham, AML LeverJournal Issue: Volume 37: Issue 3: 2007 Format Abstract In response to recently published NICE guidelines on the management of patients with MTB, we conducted a retrospective study of adult patients admitted to a large teaching hospital with a confirmed diagnosis of MTB between January 2000 and December 2005. Fifty-five patients had pulmonary infection, of whom 49 remained in negative pressure rooms throughout admission and 21 had sputum microscopy positive for acid-fast bacilli. The mean time taken to return smear results was 26 hours, cultures 36·8 days and susceptibility testing 64·0 days. The mean length of stay for MDR-TB patients was 83·5 days compared with 39·9 days for non-MDR-TB patients. HIV-positive patients did not have prolonged admissions whereas solid organ transplant recipients did (p<0·0001). The use of automated liquid culture (51%) and rpoB gene (42%) and HIV testing (43%) fell short of suggested standards yet this did not affect length of stay. The study reflected rising numbers of cases of TB nationally with implications for provision of negative pressure facilities. PDF https://www.rcpe.ac.uk/sites/default/files/lever.pdf