| Literature DB >> 26643453 |
Qianting Yang1,2, Qian Xu1,2,3, Qi Chen2, Jin Li1,2, Mingxia Zhang1,2, Yi Cai1, Haiying Liu4, Yiping Zhou5, Guofang Deng1, Qunyi Deng2, Boping Zhou1, Hardy Kornfeld6, Xinchun Chen1,2.
Abstract
Interferon-gamma Release Assays (IGRAs) significantly increases the possibility for early diagnosis of tuberculosis, but IGRAs alone cannot discriminate active TB from LTBI. Therefore, fast and reliable discrimination of active tuberculosis, especially bacteriology negative tuberculosis, from LTBI is a great necessity. Here we established an assay based on flow cytometric multiparameter assay assessing expression of CD161 along with CD3, CD4, and CD8, whereby a set of indices formulated by the percentages of CD3(+)CD161(+), CD3(+)CD4(+)CD161(+) and CD3(+)CD8(+)CD161(+) T cells multiplied with lymphocyte/monocyte ratio were established. Application of the CD3(+)CD8(+)CD161(+) index to compare a cohort of active tuberculosis with a cohort of LTBI or health control yielded 0.7662 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.6559-0.8552) or 0.7922 (95% CI 0.6846-0.8763) for sensitivity and 0.9048 (95% CI 0.8209-0.9580) or 0.8939 (95% CI 0.8392-0.9349) for specificity when the TB cohort was AFB(+); the corresponding results were 0.7481 (95% CI 0.6648-0.8198) or 0.7557 (95% CI 0.6730-0.8265) for sensitivity and 0.8571 (95% CI 0.7637-0.9239) or 0.8603 (95% CI 0.8008-0.9075) for specificity when the TB cohort was AFB(-). Our results reveal that in combination with IGRAs, CD161-based indices provide a novel, fast diagnostic solution addressing the limitation of current tuberculosis diagnostics.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26643453 PMCID: PMC4672319 DOI: 10.1038/srep17918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Establishment of a CD161-based immunological measure to diagnose active tuberculosis.
(A) Gating strategy to enumerate CD161+ populations and the proposed formulas to compare active tuberculosis and LTBI or healthy control. Lymphocytes (CD45+CD64−) and monocytes (CD45+CD64+) were gated by the CD45 marker and then separated by the presence and absence of CD64. The different subsets of lymphocytes were gated via different combinations of CD3, CD4, and CD8 markers. Note CD4+CD161+ and CD8+CD161+ cells are also CD3+. (B) Gating and enumeration of CD161+ populations from specimens of 9 participants, consistently showing clear separation of cell groups. (C) Comparison between the LTBI or HC cohort and the TB cohort using the percentages of CD3+CD161+, CD4+CD161+ and CD8+CD161+ cells. *P < 0.05.
Figure 2Comparison between the cohort of active tuberculosis and the cohort of LTBI or HC in study group I.
(A) The analytic data of using each index to compare the cohorts of TB and HC or LTBI. (B) The ROC analysis of each index to distinguish TB from HC or LTBI. The three formulas below were used for examining the diagnostic performance for discriminating active tuberculosis from LTBI or HC. ***P < 0.0001.
Figure 3Comparison between the cohort of active tuberculosis and the cohort of LTBI or HC in study group II.
(A–C) represent the results derived from the CD3+CD161+, CD4+CD161+ and CD8+CD161+ indices, respectively. For each panel, the left plot shows the analytic data of using each index to compare the different cohorts whereas the middle and right plots show the ROC analysis of each index to distinguish TB from HC or LTBI. ***P < 0.0001.
Figure 4Comparison between the cohort of active tuberculosis and the cohort of HC in study group III.
(A–C) represent the results derived from the CD3+CD161+, CD4+CD161+ and CD8+CD161+ indices, respectively. For each panel, the left plot shows the analytic data of using each index to compare the different cohorts whereas the right plot shows the ROC analysis of each index to distinguish TB from HC. ***P < 0.0001.