| Literature DB >> 22537915 |
Felix C Ringshausen1, Anja Schablon, Albert Nienhaus.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Interferon-gamma release assays (IGRAs) are increasingly used in the tuberculosis (TB) screening of health care workers (HCWs). However, comparatively high rates of conversions and reversion as well as growing evidence of substantial within-subject variability of interferon-gamma responses complicate their interpretation in the serial testing of HCWs.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22537915 PMCID: PMC3377540 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6673-7-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Med Toxicol ISSN: 1745-6673 Impact factor: 2.646
Figure 1Flow diagram for study selection. Abbreviation: IGRA = interferon-γ release assay.
Characteristics and results of studies on serial testing using IGRAs
| Study (Year of publication) | Recruitment period | Country | IGRA(s) used | Time between IGRAs | N* | Initially positive IGRAs#(%) | IGRA reversions (%) | IGRA conversions (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies in countries with a high incidence of TB (≥ 100 per 100,000 population and year) | ||||||||
| Pai et al. (2006) [ | 2004 | India | QFT | 18 months | 216 | 38/216 (17.6) | 9/38 (23.7) | 18/178 (10.1) |
| Studies in countries with an intermediate incidence of TB (≥ 20 and < 100 per 100,000 population and year) | ||||||||
| Chee et al. (2009) [ | 2005–2007 | Singapore | T-SPOT | 1 year | 182 | -† | -† | 9/182 (4.9) |
| Lee et al. (2009) [ | 2007 | South Korea | QFT‡ | 1 year | 169 | 23/169 (13.6) | -** | 21/146 (14.4) |
| Yoshiyama et al. (2009) [ | 2003, 2005 | Japan | QFT‡ | 2–4 years | 311 | 27/311 (8.7)†† | 13/31 (41.9)†† | 6/287 (2.1)†† |
| Park et al. (2010) [ | 2008–2009 | South Korea | QFT | 1 year | 275 | 29/275 (10.5) | -** | 14/244 (5.7) |
| Torres Costa et al. (2011) [ | 2007–2009 | Portugal | QFT | 1 year | 670 | 208/670 (31.0) | 46/208 (22.1) | 51/462 (11.0) |
| Rafiza et al. (2012) [ | 2009–2010 | Malaysia | QFT | 1 year | 769 | 64/769 (8.3) | 19/64 (29.7) | 69/704 (9.8) |
| Studies in countries with a low incidence of TB (< 20 per 100,000 population and year) | ||||||||
| Pollock et al. (2008) [ | 2006 | USA | QFT‡ | 1–7 months | 43 | -† | -† | 2/43 (4.7) |
| Zwerling et al. (2009)¶[ | 2007–2008 | Canada | QFT | 1 year | 60 | 4/60 (6.7) | 2/4 (50.0) | 4/56 (7.1) |
| Belknap et al. (2010)¶[ | Unknown | USA | QFT | 6 months | 1281 | 50/1281 (3.9) | 20/50 (40.0) | 44/1169 (3.8 ) |
| | | | T-SPOT | | 68/1281 (5.3) | 68/1281 (5.3) | 36/68 (52.9) | 44/1117 (3.9) |
| Gandra et al. (2010) [ | 2008 | USA | QFT | 4 weeks | 135 | -## | 66/135 (48.9) | -## |
| Ringshausen et al. (2010) [ | 2005–2008 | Germany | QFT | 18 weeks | 182 | 18/182 (9.9) | 6/18 (33.3) | 3/162 (1.9) |
| Schablon et al. (2010) [ | 2006–2009 | Germany | QFT | 1 year | 287 | 42/287 (14.6) | 13/42 (31.0) | 15/245 (6.1) |
| Schablon et al. (2011) [ | 2008–2009 | Germany | QFT | 1 year | 154 | 2/154 (1.3) | 1/2 (50.0) | 1/152 (0.7) |
| Fong et al. (2012) [ | 2007–2010 | USA | QFT | 1 year | 1871 | -§ | 10/14 (71.4)§ | 52/1857 (2.8) |
* Number of subjects with IGRA test repeats in the course of the study.
# Initially positive IGRA results in the cohort with IGRA test repeats.
† Only subjects with initially negative IGRA results were retested.
‡ QuantiFERON-TB Gold.
** Reversion rate not reported.
†† Over the course of the study 139 subjects were retested thrice. Conversion and consecutive reversion occurred in three subjects, while reversion and consecutive conversion occurred in one subject.
¶ Published abstract.
## Retrospective chart review. Only subjects with initially positive IGRA results were retested.
§ Retrospective chart review. According to the institution’s occupational health policy, health care workers with positive IGRA results were not subject to annual repeat testing. Retesting of initially IGRA-positives was performed on an individual basis only. Hence, the remainders of the 486 initially QFT-positive subjects (486/7374; 6.6%) were either advised LTBI therapy, declined retesting, or were lost to follow-up. Of the subjects with IGRA conversions on retesting, ten subjects were retested for a third time, of whom eight (80%) showed a reversion back to a negative IGRA result.
Abbreviations: IGRA = interferon-γ release assay; QFT = QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube; TB = Tuberculosis; T-SPOT = T-SPOT.TB.
Characteristics and results of studies on within-subject variability of the IFN-γ response
| Study (Year of publication) | Country | IGRA(s) used | Subjects (total number of tests) | Visits (Days) | Summary of results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies in countries with a high incidence of TB (≥ 100 per 100,000 population and year)* | |||||
| Veerapathran et al. (2008) [ | India | QFT | 14 (56) | 0, 3, 9, 12 | Over a two-week period, two out of 14 subjects (14%) had a QFT reversion. Overall, reproducibility of the quantitative results was moderate. A non-significant 30% reduction in mean IFN-y response was observed between visits. An increase of up to 16% in IFN-γ concentration was within the expected within-subject variability. |
| Van Zyl-Smit et al. (2009) [ | South Africa | QFT T-SPOT | 26# (88) | 0, 7, 14, 21 | Over a three-week period seven out of 26 volunteers had a conversion or a reversion (1x QFT, 6x T-SPOT). A change in mean IFN-γ response of ± 80% (QFT) or ± 3 SFCs accounted for 95% of the within-subject variability. |
| Detjen et al. (2009) [ | South Africa | QFT | 27 (54) | 0, 3 | Over a three-day period no qualitative changes in the QFT results were noted in 15 subjects, but a partly substantial within-subject variability in IFN-γ response was observed (intra-class correlation = 0.80). |
| Studies in countries with a low incidence of TB (< 20 per 100,000 population and year) | |||||
| Belknap et al. (2009)†[ | USA | QFT T-SPOT | 117 (234) | 0, 7–21 | Over a three-week period seven out of 117 (6%) and eight out of 105 (8%) had a conversion or reversion with QFT or T-SPOT respectively. |
| Ringshausen et al. (2011) [ | Germany | QFT T-SPOT | 35 (158) | 0, 7, 14, 21, 28 | Changes of ± 70% (QFT) and ± 60% (T-SPOT) in mean IFN-γ response accounted for 95% of the within-subject variability. Inconsistent results were significantly more frequent with QFT (29%) than with T-SPOT (9%). |
* In studies conducted in countries with a high TB incidence occult TB exposure during the study cannot be ruled out with certainty.
# Health care workers and healthy (“low risk”) subjects.
† Published abstract with updated preliminary results presented by Daley C. (on behalf of the CDC TB Epidemiological Studies Consortium). Evaluation of Interferon-γ Release Assays in the Diagnosis of Latent TB Infection in U.S. Healthcare Workers: Preliminary Results of Task Order #18. May 31 2009; 2nd Global Symposium on IGRAs, Dubrovnik, Croatia.
Abbreviations: IGRA = interferon-γ release assay; IFN-γ = interferon-γ; QFT = QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube; SFC = spot-forming cell; TB = tuberculosis; T-SPOT = T.SPOT.TB.
Figure 2Proposed flow chart for the interpretation of repeat QFT results in the serial testing of health care workers in countries with low or intermediate TB incidence rates. Abbreviations: QFT = QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube; TB = tuberculosis.