PRISM Rounds: Pulmonary Critical Care & Sleep Podcast
In this episode of PRISM Rounds, we review the NEJM study of MiniDock MTB, a portable near-point-of-care molecular test for pulmonary tuberculosis using sputum and tongue swabs. The study found that MiniDock MTB outperformed smear microscopy, approached Xpert Ultra performance with sputum swabs, and met WHO near-point-of-care diagnostic accuracy targets. We discuss why this matters for resource-limited settings, where delayed TB diagnosis, repeat visits, and limited access to molecular testing remain major barriers to care. We also cover the key limitations: lower sensitivity in paucibacillary disease, smear-negative TB, and people living with HIV, plus the need for reflex drug-resistance testing. Educational use only. AI-generated voices may include occasional mispronunciations. Article: https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2509761 Tuberculosis, TB, pulmonary tuberculosis, MiniDock MTB, point-of-care testing, near-point-of-care diagnostics, molecular diagnostics, tongue swab, sputum swab, Xpert Ultra, smear microscopy, global health, infectious diseases, pulmonary medicine, critical care, resource-limited settings, diagnostic equity, implementation science, public health, NEJM, medical podcast, journal club, evidence-based medicine, FOAMed, FOMEd, Free Open Access Medical Education, PRISM Rounds, AI-generated medical education, AI medical podcast, clinical research summary Tags
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