RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 P213 Are respiratory samples useful for the diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis in the absence of chest X-ray abnormalities? JF Thorax JO Thorax FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Thoracic Society SP A216 OP A217 DO 10.1136/thorax-2018-212555.370 VO 73 IS Suppl 4 A1 Barrett, JC A1 Brown, A A1 Morgan, C A1 Coughlan, C A1 Subbarao, S A1 Abbara, A A1 John, L A1 Martin, L A1 Lynn, W A1 Russell, G A1 Kon, OM YR 2018 UL http://thorax.bmj.com/content/73/Suppl_4/A216.2.abstract AB Introduction An abnormal chest x-ray is considered by the World Health Organisation to have a ‘high sensitivity for pulmonary tuberculosis’ and thus is widely relied upon to screen for active disease.1 National Institute for Clinical Excellence recommends using chest x-ray (CXR) findings to determine which microbiological samples to collect, which may risk missing smear or culture-positive patients with normal imaging.2 Here we assess the yield of respiratory samples for pulmonary TB patients with a normal CXR at diagnosis, and describe the characteristics of culture-positive, normal CXR patientsMethods Health records of all patients entered into the London TB Register for 6 hospitals between 2011 and 2016 with a diagnosis of pulmonary or intra-thoracic nodal tuberculosis were reviewed retrospectively. Patients with a normal CXR and no subsequent abnormal CXR within 6 weeks of starting TB therapy were identified, and radiological and microbiological findings reviewed. Duplicates and denotified patients were excluded.CT abnormalities included tree-in-bud (11%), consolidation or nodules (46%), cavitation (10%), lymphadenopathy (30%) and pleural effusion (4%). 45% had more than one abnormality.There was no significant difference in median age or biochemical markers (ESR, CRP, albumin, vitamin D) at diagnosis between the culture-positive and culture-negative groups. 7 culture-negative patients were HIV-positive, compared with 1 culture-positive patient.Discussion 43% of patients with a normal CXR had respiratory samples which were culture positive for Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.Tb); as such, we demonstrate the value of obtaining respiratory samples in patients with a suspected diagnosis of pulmonary TB, even when the CXR is normal. Yield of smear on all types of sample was low (4%–5%), however around one third of samples obtained via spontaneous, induced sputum, or BAL, were culture positive.While CT imaging usually supported the diagnosis, 3 patients in our cohort were found to be culture-positive on sputum samples despite normal CT imaging. M.Tb culture yield of respiratory samples was lower for patients diagnosed with intra-thoracic nodal TB, however few samples were sent.ReferencesChest Radiography in Tuberculosis Detection. Summary of current WHO recommendations and guidance on programmatic approaches 2016.http://www.who.int/tb/publications/chest-radiography/en/Diagnosing and Managing Active Tuberculosis. NICE guidance2016. https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng33/chapter/Recommendations#active-tbView this table:Abstract P213 Table 1 Microbiological and radiological results