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. 2017 Jan 5;43(1):25–28. doi: 10.14745/ccdr.v43i01a05

Table 1. Clinical testing for identifying potential cases of non-tuberculous Mycobacterium (NTM) following cardiac surgery.

Clinical symptoms/exposure Specimen and testing recommendations
Asymptomatic
AND
Cardiothoracic surgery after Nov 1, 2011
None
Symptomatic1
  • Constitutional: recurrent or prolonged fever, fatigue, shortness of breath, weight loss, night sweats

  • Cardiac: prosthetic valve endocarditis and/or prosthetic vascular graft infection

  • Extracardiac: bone infection, sternotomy surgical wound infection, mediastinitis, hepatitis, bloodstream infection, ocular infection (panuveitis, multifocal chorioiditis, chorioretinitis)

  • Immunologic/embolic: splenomegaly, cytopenia

  • Infants: febrile episodes and failure to thrive.

AND
  • Open-chest surgery 3 months to 5 years prior to illness onset

  • Blood: Request mycobacterial blood culture at local, commercial or reference laboratory as available (Appendix 1).

    • Specific incremental yield of multiple blood cultures is not known at present. A set of 2 cultures collected 12 hours apart is a reasonable option with more specific recommendations to follow as data becomes available. NTM isolation from a sterile site is highly likely to be clinically significant (8)

  • Tissue (including bone), and fluid: Request mycobacterial culture and acid fast staining at local, commercial or reference laboratory as available.

    • Aseptically collect and submit in sterile container without fixative

  • Submit to laboratory with appropriate requisition indicating patient history

  • Refer culture to reference laboratory as necessary for species level discrimination

1 Symptomatic is defined as: Investigation of NTM infection in patients with prolonged illness (≥3 weeks) AND absence of alternative diagnosis through routine investigation to eliminate common etiologic agents