Literature DB >> 17768365

Research for practice: a new in vitro test for identification of tuberculosis infection.

Edita Hansted1, Brigita Sitkauskiene, Rimantas Kevalas, Andrea Tattersall, Toni Day.   

Abstract

Tuberculosis is one of the biggest global health problems. One-third of the world's population (2 billion) is latently infected with tuberculosis. The tuberculin skin test is commonly used to diagnose tuberculosis infection. This test has poor specificity and sensitivity, cross-reactivity with bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccination and many environmental mycobacteria, and poor sensitivity (only 75-90% in active tuberculosis). Mycobacterium tuberculosis activates a strong T cell-mediated immune response. That is why, a better marker for tuberculosis infection could be the presence of mycobacteria specific interferon-gamma-secreting T cells. These cells can be identified in blood or any other sample, which contains T cells. The test specificity is 99.9% (in low-risk control groups), and the sensitivity is 97.2% (in subjects with culture-confirmed active disease). New in vitro diagnostic test of tuberculosis, based on tuberculosis-induced immunological mechanisms, seems to be more specific and useful as previous methods.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17768365

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Medicina (Kaunas)        ISSN: 1010-660X            Impact factor:   2.430


  1 in total

1.  T-cell-based diagnosis of tuberculosis infection in children in Lithuania: a country of high incidence despite a high coverage with bacille Calmette-Guerin vaccination.

Authors:  Edita Hansted; Angele Andriuskeviciene; Raimundas Sakalauskas; Rimantas Kevalas; Brigita Sitkauskiene
Journal:  BMC Pulm Med       Date:  2009-08-18       Impact factor: 3.317

  1 in total

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