Mycobacterium – Respiratory

Consistent with O. Reg. 671/92 of the French Language Services Act, laboratory testing information on this page is only available in English because it is scientific or technical in nature and is for use only by qualified health care providers and not by members of the public.

Specimen Collection and Handling

Specimen Requirements

Test Requested Required Requisition(s) Specimen Type Minimum Volume Collection Kit

Mycobacterium

Sputum

5.0-10.0 ml

Tuberculosis Kit order#: 390042

Mycobacterium

Tracheal aspirate

See note 3

Tuberculosis Kit order#: 390042

Mycobacterium

Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL)

5.0 ml

Tuberculosis Kit order#: 390042

Mycobacterium

Bronchial washing

5.0 ml

Tuberculosis Kit order#: 390042

Mycobacterium

esophageal brushing

See note 5

Tuberculosis Kit order#: 390042

Mycobacterium

lung tissue

1-2 grams

Tuberculosis Kit order#: 390042

Submission and Collection Notes

1

Use the Tuberculosis (TB) kit to submit specimens collected aseptically. Pooled specimens, saliva, 24 hour collections, specimens received in formalin, frozen specimens, dry swabs or swabs in anaerobic transport medium and specimens submitted in endotracheal tubes will not be tested.

2

Collect 3 sputum specimens (either spontaneous or induced) on the same day, a minimum of 1 hour apart or optimally, sputum should be from an early morning collection from a deep productive cough on 3 consecutive days. For follow-up patients on therapy, submit 3 specimens after 2 months and again after completion of therapy. Do not pool the 3 specimens or have the patient rinse mouth with tap water before producing sputum.

3

If collecting tracheal aspirates, collect as much material as possible in a syringe with Luer lock cap, needle removed, or in a sterile container.

4

If collecting bronchial washings, avoid contaminating the bronchoscope with tap water as saprophytic mycobacteria may produce false-positive culture or smear results.

5

Bronchial brushings and lung biopsies may be submitted in a small volume of sterile saline. Do not submit tissue samples on gauze. Do not freeze. 

6

Refer to Additional Mycobacterium Collection Information for detailed collection instructions.

Limitations

Frozen specimens may decrease the yield of mycobacteria.

Swabs are not recommended for the isolation of mycobacteria, since they provide limited material. They are acceptable only if a specimen cannot be collected by other means. Place swabs in aerobic Amies or Stuarts transport medium. Negative results obtained from specimens submitted on swabs are not reliable.

Specimens obtained for initial diagnosis after the initiation of antimicrobial therapy may produce false negative results.

Saprophytic mycobacteria in tap water may produce false-positive culture or slide results.

Delayed transportation of specimens may promote overgrowth by contaminating indigenous microbiota.

Storage and Transport

Label the specimen container with the patient’s full name, date of collection and one other unique identifier such as the patient’s date of birth or Health Card Number. Failure to provide this information may result in rejection or testing delay.

Place specimen container in the biohazard bag and seal bag, and insert the completed requisition in the pocket on the outside of the sealed biohazard bag.

Special Instructions

Store at 2-8 °C if transport is delayed more than one hour. Specimens should be transferred to the lab ASAP.

Requisitions and Kit Ordering

Test Frequency and Turnaround Time (TAT)

Mycobacterium respiratory cultures are performed daily Monday to Saturday. 

Turnaround time is up to 1 day from receipt by PHO laboratory for smear results from the concentrated specimen.

Turnaround time for negative cultures is 49 days from receipt by PHO laboratory.

A positive culture is reported within 24 hours of growth. Depending on the species and treatment of the patient, a culture may grow within 1 to 2 weeks or take as long as 6-7 weeks.

All new isolates of M. tuberculosis complex are phoned to the submitter within 24 hours of identification.

Test Methods

A smear, prepared from the concentrate, is stained using the Auramine-Rhodamine (AR) fluorochrome stain and fluorescence microscopy. 

A negative AFB smear does not rule out TB, the culture may still be positive.

Specimens are set up for culture on solid and in liquid media and incubated for up to 7 weeks.

Nucleic acid amplification tests (NAAT) are used in special circumstances. For more information see Mycobacterium – PCR for MTBC/MAC.

Reporting

Results are reported to the ordering physician or health care provider as indicated on the requisition.

Specimens that have smear positive for Acid Fast Bacilli are reported to the Medical Officer of Health as per Health Protection and Promotion Act.

STAT and Critical Samples Testing

STAT testing is not available

Contact Public Health Ontario Laboratory to request approval for URGENT testing.

If URGENT testing is approved, mark URGENT on the outside of the package as well as on the requisition. A phone number and contact person must be provided for phoning the result.
URGENT smear specimens that are received in the lab by 2:00 p.m. will have a smear done and phoned the same day. Specimens that arrive after 2 p.m. will have the smear result phoned first thing the following morning.

URGENT testing is only available Monday to Saturday.

Updated 20 July 2020