| Literature DB >> 28415587 |
Dolapo O Awoniyi1, Ralf Baumann1,2,3, Novel N Chegou1, Belinda Kriel1, Ruschca Jacobs1, Martin Kidd4, Andre G Loxton1, Susanne Kaempfer3, Mahavir Singh3, Gerhard Walzl1.
Abstract
Immunoglobulin G (IgG) based tests for the diagnosis of active tuberculosis (TB) disease often show a lack of specificity in TB endemic regions, which is mainly due to a high background prevalence of LTBI. Here, we investigated the combined performance of the responses of different Ig classes to selected mycobacterial antigens in primary healthcare clinic attendees with signs and symptoms suggestive of TB. The sensitivity and specificity of IgA, IgG and/or IgM to LAM and 7 mycobacterial protein antigens (ESAT-6, Tpx, PstS1, AlaDH, MPT64, 16kDa and 19kDa) and 2 antigen combinations (TUB, TB-LTBI) in the plasma of 63 individuals who underwent diagnostic work-up for TB after presenting with symptoms and signs compatible with possible active TB were evaluated. Active TB was excluded in 42 individuals of whom 21 has LTBI whereas active TB was confirmed in 21 patients of whom 19 had a follow-up blood draw at the end of 6-month anti-TB treatment. The leading single serodiagnostic markers to differentiate between the presence or absence of active TB were anti-16 kDa IgA, anti-MPT64 IgA with sensitivity and specificity of 90%/90% and 95%/90%, respectively. The combined use of 3 or 4 antibodies further improved this performance to accuracies above 95%. After successful completion of anti-TB treatment at month 6, the levels of 16 kDa IgA and 16 kDa IgM dropped significantly whereas LAM IgG and TB-LTBI IgG increased. These results show the potential of extending investigation of anti-tuberculous IgG responses to include IgM and IgA responses against selected protein and non-protein antigens in differentiating active TB from other respiratory diseases in TB endemic settings.Entities:
Keywords: Ig class; antibody; biomarker; diagnosis; tuberculosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28415587 PMCID: PMC5514927 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.16401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Demographic characteristics of study participants
| All | TB | LTBI | QFT-negative ORD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participants no. | 63 | 21 | 21 | 21 |
| Age, yr | 34.1±11.3 | 41.0±10.5 | 26.0±3.6 | 35.2±12.2 |
| M/F no. (%) | 30(48)/33(52) | 8(38)/13(62) | 13(62)/8(38) | 9(43)/12(57) |
| HIV status pos/neg | 1/62 | 0/20 | 0/20 | 1/20 |
| QFT-IT positive | 42 | 21 | 21 | Nil |
Values are mean (±SD) unless indicated otherwise.
Figure 1Plasma concentrations of serodiagnostic markers in TB and ORD
Concentrations of plasma serodiagnostic markers were measured in 21 TB patients, and 42 ORD cases. The ORD group comprised 21 LTBI individuals and 21 QFT-negative ORD. Representative plots are shown for diagnostic markers showing significant differences between groups and the vertical bars denote the mean and 95% confidence intervals. Corrections were applied within analyses of markers using Fischer Least Significant Differences post hoc test or Games- Howell post hoc test depending on homogeneity of variance. All the reported significant p-values were adjusted.
Sensitivities and specificities of single serodiagnostic markers in differentiating active TB (n=21) from LTBI (n=21) and ORD (n=42)
| Antigen | Ig class | AUC | TB vs ORD | AUC | TB vs LTBI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (95% CI) | Sensitivity/specificity (%) | (95% CI) | Sensitivity/specificity (%) | ||
| AlaDH | A | 0.73(0.59-0.86) | 0.76/0.69 | 0.73(0.57-0.89) | 0.76/0.71 |
| AlaDH | G | 0.63(0.49-0.76) | 0.62/0.64 | 0.65(0.47-0.83) | 0.76/0.57 |
| ESAT-6 | A | 0.73(0.60-0.86) | 0.67/0.79 | 0.75(0.61-0.89) | 0.67/0.81 |
| ESAT-6 | G | 0.46(0.27-0.65) | 0.52/0.60 | 0.45(0.25-0.64) | 0.52/0.52 |
| LAM | A | 0.64(0.49-0.79) | 0.52-0.76 | 0.59(0.41-0.76) | 0.52/0.76 |
| LAM | G | 0.91(0.83-0.98) | 0.86/0.90 | 0.95(0.89-1.00) | 0.86/0.95 |
| MPT64 | A | 0.96(0.92-1.00) | 0.95/0.90 | 0.97(0.91-1.00) | 0.95/0.90 |
| MPT64 | G | 0.69(0.56-0.82) | 0.76/0.60 | 0.71(0.54-0.88) | 0.76/0.67 |
| PstS1 | G | 0.43(0.28-0.58) | 0.52/0.52 | 0.51(0.32-0.70) | 0.62/0.62 |
| TB-LTBI | A | 0.76(0.63-0.88) | 0.67/0.76 | 0.76(0.61-0.91) | 0.67/0.86 |
| TB-LTBI | G | 0.90(0.83-0.98) | 0.90/0.79 | 0.89(0.78-0.99) | 0.90/0.71 |
| Tpx | G | 0.54(0.39-0.68) | 0.55/0.57 | 0.52(0.34-0.70) | 0.57/0.52 |
| TUB | A | 0.74(0.62-0.87) | 0.81/0.60 | 0.79(0.65-0.92) | 0.81/0.62 |
| 16kDa | A | 0.93(0.87-0.99) | 0.90/0.90 | 0.99(0.98-1.00) | 0.95/0.95 |
| 16kDa | G | 0.77(0.66-0.89) | 0.81/0.67 | 0.78(0.63-0.93) | 0.95/0.62 |
| 16kDa | M | 0.84(0.74-0.94) | 0.71/0.86 | 0.80(0.67-0.94) | 0.71/0.81 |
| 19kDa | A | 0.60(0.49-0.72) | 0.33/0.88 | 0.61(0.49-0.73) | 0.33/0.90 |
| 19kDa | G | 0.76(0.63-0.88) | 0.86/0.67 | 0.74(0.58-0.90) | 0.86/0.67 |
Receiver operator curve (ROC) analysis was used in determining the accuracy (sensitivity/specificity) of each serodiagnostic marker. ORD individuals comprised 21 LTBI and 21 QFT-ve ORD. Abbreviations: Ig = Immunoglobin; vs = versus; AUC = Area under the curve; CI = Confidence Interval.
Figure 2Receiver operator characteristics (ROC) curves of top single serodiagnostic markers for discriminating 21 active tuberculosis patients from 42 other respiratory disease cases
Figure 3Plasma concentrations of serodiagnostic markers in individuals with tuberculosis, latently infected tuberculosis and QFT-negative other respiratory diseases
Concentrations of plasma serodiagnostic markers were measured in 21 tuberculosis patients, 21 latently infected tuberculosis individuals and 21 QFT-negative other respiratory diseases. Representative plots are shown for diagnostic markers showing significant differences between groups and the vertical bars denote 95% confidence intervals. Significant difference between different groups p<0.05 is shown with the different alphabetical letters. The same alphabetical letters are used when there is no significant difference p>0.05 between the different groups. Corrections were applied within analyses of markers using Fischer Least Significant Differences post hoc testing or Games Howell post hoc depending on homogeneity of variance. All the reported significant p-values were adjusted.
Figure 4Receiving operating characteristics (ROC) curves of top single serodiagnostic markers for discriminating 21 active tuberculosis patients from 21 latently infected individuals
Accuracies of seroantigen combinations to distinguish between TB and ORD, or LTBI, after general discriminant analysis
| TB vs ORD | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antigen combination | Resubstitution classification matrix | Leave-one-out cross-validation | |||
| %TB | % ORD | % Accuracy | % TB | % ORD | |
| Anti-TB-LTBI IgG | 95.23 (20/1) | 97.61 (1/41) | 96.8 | 95.23 (20/1) | 97.61 (1/41) |
| Anti-Tpx IgG | |||||
| Anti-MPT64 IgA | PPV: 0.95 (95% CI; 0.74-0.99) | ||||
| NPV: 0.97 (95% CI; 0.85-0.99) | |||||
The predictive abilities of the optimal combination of serodiagnostic markers to differentiate between active TB (n=21), definite LTBI (n=21) (IGRA+) or ORD individuals (IGRA+ and IGRA- combined) (n=41) was investigated using best subsets general discriminant analysis and a leave-one-out cross-validation table was constructed using the variables that were included in the optimal classification model. PPV=Positive predictive value, NPV=Negative predictive value.
Figure 5Plasma concentrations of serodiagnostic markers of tuberculosis patients during anti-TB treatment
Concentrations of plasma serodiagnostic markers were measured in 21 TB patients at baseline (BSL) and in 19 TB patients who were followed up at end of month 6 anti-TB treatment. Representative plots are shown for diagnostic markers showing significant differences between the two time points and the vertical bars denote 95% confidence intervals. Corrections were applied within analyses of markers using Fischer Least Significant Differences post hoc testing or Games Howell post hoc depending on homogeneity of variance. All the reported significant p-values were adjusted.
Recombinant antigens of M. tuberculosis used in this study
| Antigens of | Rv no. | Mol.mass (kDa) | Reference(s) | Ig class |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 kDa glycolipoprotein, LpqH | Rv3763 | 16 | [ | IgA, IgG |
| AlaDH | Rv2780 | 38.7 | [ | IgA, IgG |
| ESAT-6 | Rv3875 | 9.9 | [ | IgA, IgG |
| HSP16.3, HSPX, 14 kDa, 16 kDa, ACR | Rv2031c | 16.3 | [ | IgA, IgG, IgM |
| LAM | – | – | IgA, IgG | |
| MPT64 | Rv1980c | 24.8 | [ | IgA, IgG |
| PstS1, 38 kDa | Rv0934 | 38.2 | [ | IgG |
| Tpx, CFP20 | Rv1932 | 16.9 | [ | IgA, IgG |