Literature DB >> 16631911

Use in routine clinical practice of two commercial blood tests for diagnosis of infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis: a prospective study.

Giovanni Ferrara1, Monica Losi, Roberto D'Amico, Pietro Roversi, Roberto Piro, Marisa Meacci, Barbara Meccugni, Ilaria Marchetti Dori, Alessandro Andreani, Barbara Maria Bergamini, Cristina Mussini, Fabio Rumpianesi, Leonardo M Fabbri, Luca Richeldi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Two commercial blood assays for the diagnosis of latent tuberculosis infection--T-SPOT.TB and QuantiFERON-TB Gold--have been separately compared with the tuberculin skin test. Our aim was to compare the efficacy of all three tests in the same population sample.
METHODS: We did a prospective study in 393 consecutively enrolled patients who were tested simultaneously with T-SPOT.TB and QuantiFERON-TB Gold because of suspected latent or active tuberculosis. 318 patients also had results available for a tuberculin skin test.
FINDINGS: Overall agreement with the skin test was similar (T-SPOT.TB kappa=0.508, QuantiFERON-TB Gold kappa=0.460), but fewer BCG-vaccinated individuals were identified as positive by the two blood assays than by the tuberculin skin test (p=0.003 for T-SPOT.TB and p<0.0001 for QuantiFERON-TB Gold). Indeterminate results were significantly more frequent with QuantiFERON-TB Gold (11%, 43 of 383) than with T-SPOT.TB (3%, 12 of 383; p<0.0001) and were associated with immunosuppressive treatments for both tests. Age younger than 5 years was significantly associated with indeterminate results with QuantiFERON-TB Gold (p=0.003), but not with T-SPOT.TB. Overall, T-SPOT.TB produced significantly more positive results (38%, n=144, vs 26%, n=100, with QuantiFERON-TB Gold; p<0.0001), and close contacts of patients with active tuberculosis were more likely to be positive with T-SPOT.TB than with QuantiFERON-TB Gold (p=0.0010).
INTERPRETATION: T-SPOT.TB and QuantiFERON-TB Gold have higher specificity than the tuberculin skin test. Rates of indeterminate and positive results, however, differ between the blood tests, suggesting that they might provide different results in routine clinical practice.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16631911     DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(06)68579-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


  121 in total

1.  Discordance among commercially available diagnostics for latent tuberculosis infection.

Authors:  James D Mancuso; Gerald H Mazurek; David Tribble; Cara Olsen; Naomi E Aronson; Lawrence Geiter; Donald Goodwin; Lisa W Keep
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2011-12-08       Impact factor: 21.405

2.  Evaluation of a tuberculosis whole-blood interferon-γ chemiluminescent immunoassay among Chinese military recruits.

Authors:  Xueqiong Wu; Ying Hou; Yan Liang; Junxian Zhang; Yourong Yang; Lan Wang; Chuiying Zhang
Journal:  Mol Diagn Ther       Date:  2011-12-01       Impact factor: 4.074

3.  Interferon-gamma release assays in the detection of latent tuberculosis infection in patients with inflammatory arthritis scheduled for anti-tumour necrosis factor treatment.

Authors:  Sonia Mínguez; Irene Latorre; Lourdes Mateo; Alicia Lacoma; Jéssica Diaz; Alejandro Olivé; Jose Domínguez
Journal:  Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2012-01-21       Impact factor: 2.980

4.  Tuberculosis antigen-specific immune responses can be detected using enzyme-linked immunospot technology in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 patients with advanced disease.

Authors:  S A Clark; S L Martin; A Pozniak; A Steel; B Ward; J Dunning; D C Henderson; M Nelson; B Gazzard; P Kelleher
Journal:  Clin Exp Immunol       Date:  2007-08-02       Impact factor: 4.330

5.  Comparison of two commercially available gamma interferon blood tests for immunodiagnosis of tuberculosis.

Authors:  Jose Domínguez; Juan Ruiz-Manzano; Malú De Souza-Galvão; Irene Latorre; Celia Milà; Silvia Blanco; M Angeles Jiménez; Cristina Prat; Alicia Lacoma; Neus Altet; Vicente Ausina
Journal:  Clin Vaccine Immunol       Date:  2007-10-31

Review 6.  TNFalpha blockade in human diseases: an overview of efficacy and safety.

Authors:  Jan Lin; David Ziring; Sheetal Desai; Sungjin Kim; Maida Wong; Yael Korin; Jonathan Braun; Elaine Reed; David Gjertson; Ram Raj Singh
Journal:  Clin Immunol       Date:  2007-10-04       Impact factor: 3.969

7.  Follow-up study of tuberculosis-exposed supermarket customers with negative tuberculin skin test results in association with positive gamma interferon release assay results.

Authors:  Willeke P J Franken; Ben F P J Koster; Ailko W J Bossink; Steven F T Thijsen; John J M Bouwman; Jaap T van Dissel; Sandra M Arend
Journal:  Clin Vaccine Immunol       Date:  2007-07-11

8.  Diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis due to detection of ESAT-6-specific gamma interferon production in cerebrospinal fluid enzyme-linked immunospot assay.

Authors:  Shuji Murakami; Mitsuhiro Takeno; Hideaki Oka; Atsuhisa Ueda; Takashi Kurokawa; Yoshiyuki Kuroiwa; Yoshiaki Ishigatsubo
Journal:  Clin Vaccine Immunol       Date:  2008-03-19

9.  From genome-based in silico predictions to ex vivo verification of leprosy diagnosis.

Authors:  Annemieke Geluk; John S Spencer; Kidist Bobosha; Maria C V Pessolani; Geraldo M B Pereira; Sayera Banu; Nadine Honoré; Stephen T Reece; Murdo MacDonald; Bishwa Raj Sapkota; Chaman Ranjit; Kees L M C Franken; Martha Zewdie; Abraham Aseffa; Rabia Hussain; Mariane M Stefani; Sang-Nae Cho; Linda Oskam; Patrick J Brennan; Hazel M Dockrell
Journal:  Clin Vaccine Immunol       Date:  2009-01-28

10.  Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Infection, Immigration Status, and Diagnostic Discordance: A Comparison of Tuberculin Skin Test and QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube Test Among Immigrants to the U.S.

Authors:  Fernando A Wilson; Thaddeus L Miller; Jim P Stimpson
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2016 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 2.792

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