| Literature DB >> 25886172 |
Chloé Wyndham-Thomas1,2, Violette Dirix3, Kinda Schepers4, Charlotte Martin5, Marc Hildebrand6, Jean-Christophe Goffard7, Fanny Domont8, Myriam Libin9, Marc Loyens10,11,12,13, Camille Locht14,15,16,17, Jean-Paul Van Vooren18, Françoise Mascart19,20.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The screening and treatment of latent tuberculosis (TB) infection reduces the risk of progression to active disease and is currently recommended for HIV-infected patients. The aim of this study is to evaluate, in a low TB incidence setting, the potential contribution of an interferon-gamma release assay in response to the mycobacterial latency antigen Heparin-Binding Haemagglutinin (HBHA-IGRA), to the detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in HIV-infected patients.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25886172 PMCID: PMC4337251 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-015-0796-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Baseline characteristics of the LTBI screening candidates
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| Age; median [range] | 38 [22–67] |
| Gender | |
| Female | 15 (31%) |
| Male | 33 (69%) |
| Ethnic origin | |
| Sub Saharan | 22 (46%) |
| Caucasian | 18 (38%) |
| North African | 3 (6%) |
| Asian | 3 (6%) |
| South American | 2 (4%) |
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| Presence of at least one major | 23 (48%) |
| Born in high incidence countrya | 22 (46%) |
| Arrival in low incidence country ≤ 2 years | 4 (8%)b |
| Self-reported close contact with a case of TB | 1 |
| Close contact with a case of sputum positive TB | 1 |
| Otherc | 5 (10%) |
| Visitors of endemic countriesd | 14 (29%) |
| LTBI reactivation risk factors | |
| Presence of ≥ 1 reactivation risk factor other than HIV | 5 (10%) |
| Diabetes | 2 (4%) |
| Body mass index < 18,5 | 2 (4%) |
| Renal insufficiency +/− dialysis | 1 |
| Solid tumor | 1 |
| Alcoholism | 1 |
| Self-reported BCG vaccination status | |
| Vaccinated | 16 (33%) |
| Not vaccinated | 17 (35%) |
| Unknown | 15 (31%) |
| HIV infection parameters | |
| HIV-1 | 47 (98%) |
| HIV-2 | 1 |
| Seroconversion ≤ 2 years | 9 (19%)e |
| CD4+ T-cell count; median [range] | 517 [1–1065] |
| Viral load; median [range] | 23242 [<40-1.107]f |
Units: Age (years); CD4+ T-cell count (cells/mm3); viral load (copies/ml).
a>100 cases of TB/ 100000 inhabitants.
bRepresents 17% of those born in a high incidence country.
cProfessional risk, previous incarceration, asylum seeker, homeless.
dConcerns the patients born in low incidence country.
eDate of HIV seroconversion unknown for 40% of the enrolled subject.s
fThe patient with an undetectable viral load is an elite controller (HIV-2 infected).
Figure 1LTBI screening in treatment-naïve HIV-infected patients: relation between HBHA-IGRA, QFT-GIT and TST result. Forty-eight treatment naïve HIV-infected subjects underwent screening for latent tuberculosis with 3 different immunological tools: TST, QFT-GIT and HBHA-IGRA. HBHA-IGRA results were interpretable for 43 subjects. The test measures both IFN-γ responses to PPD and to HBHA that must be above or equal to 200 pg/ml and 50 pg/ml respectively for the assay to be considered positive. These cut-offs are represented in the graph as dotted lines. Each point on the graph represents the results of an individual. The format of the point (black square, black dot, white triangle or black and white square) represents the TST and QFT-GIT results obtained for the given individual, as indicated in the legend of the graph. As shown in the magnified square, 26 patients had undetectable IFN-γ levels in response to both PPD and HBHA, including 4 that had QFT-GIT positive tests.
Factors associated with positive LTBI screening test results
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| 11.8 [0.6-232] | 0.4455 | 2.2 [0.5-10.3] |
| 9.9 [1.1-90.7] |
| BCG | 0.2273 | 6.0 [0.2-136] | 1 | 0.7 [0.1-5.0] |
| 15 [0.7-307] |
| CD4+ T-cell count | 0.8773 | NA | 0.7777 | NA | 0.6021 | NA |
| Viral load | 0.1844 | NA |
| NA | 0.0752 | NA |
A non-random association between positive test results and 1) the presence of an Mtb exposure risk factor, 2) BCG vaccination status, 3) CD4+ T-cell counts and 4) viral loads was assessed for the TST, the QFT-GIT and the HBHA-IGRA. Fisher’s exact test and odds ratio (OR) with a 95% confidence interval (CI 95%) was applied for the dichotomous variables (presence or not of an Mtb exposure risk factor and BCG vaccination status). Chi-squared test for trend was used for CD4+ T-cell counts and viral loads organized into ordinal variables (CD4+ T-cell counts <50; 50–199; 200–499, >500 cell/mm3 and viral loads <40, 40–10000; 10000–100000; >100000 copies/ml). Significant p values are in bold type (p < 0.05).
Effect of HIV on PPD and HBHA induced IFN-γ levels
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| CD4+ T-cell count | 43 | 0.1499 | 0.2261 | 42 | 0.9029 | −0.0192 |
| CD4+ % | 42 |
| 0.4473 | 41 | 0.5827 | 0.0873 |
| CD4+/CD8+ ratio | 43 |
| 0.8586 | 42 | 0.4265 | 0.1245 |
| Viral load | 41 | 0.5777 | −0.0896 | 41 | 0.4643 | −0.1175 |
Pearson correlation was used to measure the association between PPD- or HBHA-induced IFN-γ responses and four different predictor variables associated with HIV-infection severity: absolute CD4+ T-cell counts, CD4+ percentages (%), CD4+/CD8+ ratios and viral loads. Significant p values are in bold type (p < 0.05). conc = concentration; n = number of tests; r = pearson's product moment coefficient.
Characteristics of the HIV subjects with active tuberculosis
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| 1 | 47y | CD4: 68 (6%) | Unmasking miliary TB-IRIS |
| Caucasian | VL: not tested | ||
| cART: yes | |||
| 2 | 42y | CD4:124 (14%) | Miliary TB |
| Sub saharan | VL: 712000 | ||
| cART: no | |||
| 3 | 28y | CD4: 26 (6%) | Miliary TB |
| Sub saharan | VL: 8070000 | ||
| cART: no | |||
| 4 | 38y | CD4: 141 (35%) | Pulmonary TB |
| Sub saharan | VL < 40 | ||
| cART: yes | |||
| 5 | 38y | CD4: 25 (5%) | Pulmonary and ganglionary TB |
| Sub saharan | VL: 201000 | ||
| cART: no | |||
| 6 | 43y | CD4: 580 (37%) | ART-associated Pleuro-pulmonary TB |
| Sub saharan | VL <40 | ||
| cART: yes |
ART: antiretroviral therapy; cART: combination ART; CD4: CD4+ T cell count cells/mm3 (percentage); TB: Tuberculosis; TB-IRIS: TB-associated immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome; VL: viral load (copies/ml); y: years.
Figure 2Comparison of the IFN-γ responses to PPD and HBHA between TB/HIV and LTBI/HIV subjects. Overall 62 HIV-infected patients were tested with HBHA-IGRA: 48 LTBI screening candidates and 14 patients with clinical suspicion of active TB. At baseline, 10 of these patients had a positive HBHA-IGRA. These 10 positive assays are represented in the graph in terms of the IFN-γ concentrations obtained in response to PPD (Y axis) and HBHA (X-axis) stimulations. The test cut-offs are marked by the dotted lines. The HIV-infected subjects from the LTBI screening group (n = 7) are represented by dots while the HIV patients with confirmed TB are encircled and individually represented by a triangle (n = 3).
Figure 3Multiplex analysis of culture supernatants. A panel of cytokines and chemokines were measured in the culture supernatants of (A) PPD-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), (B) HBHA-stimulated PBMC and (C) the TB Antigen tube of the QFT-GIT. Median concentrations with interquartile ranges are represented in the graph. Results between subjects with a positive LTBI screening (n = 11), subjects with a negative LTBI screening (n = 8) and active TB patients (n = 6) were compared using Mann–Whitney U test or Kruskall-Wallis test. Significant p values are shown.