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Resposta do autor

Maria Alice da Silva Telles

To the Editor:

I would like to thank Dr. Wiwanitkit for his interesting comments on our study.

We agree that the technique depends on the expertise of clinical microscopists. However, there is no simpler method. In order to classify an isolate as M. tuberculosis complex, we can use biochemical tests (niacin, nitrate or p-nitrobenzoic acid) or molecular methods; these tests are expensive, especially the niacin test, which requires a good quality strip for appropriate results, otherwise the results cannot be trusted. Good quality niacin test strips are quite expensive, and considerable growth of the isolate is necessary. There are also molecular methods, which demand much more laboratory expertise.

The cost analysis we included is related only to the supplies. It was never our aim to conduct a comprehensive cost-effectiveness analysis in this study. Such an analysis is very complex, and a multidisciplinary team that includes an economist is required in order to make high-level analyses.

Settings in which microscopy and culture are performed demand a reliable laboratory expert, who should be able to identify the macroscopic aspect of M. tuberculosis cultures and should therefore also be perfectly able to perform the screening test. If a laboratory is going to employ a method based on molecular biology, it will need personnel with much greater expertise than that required to perform the procedure outlined in our study.

Maria Alice da Silva Telles
Head of the Regional Referral Laboratory. Instituto Adolfo Lutz, São Paulo, Brazil

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