| Literature DB >> 30404942 |
B Leticia Fernández-Carballo1, Tobias Broger1, Romain Wyss1, Niaz Banaei2,3,4, Claudia M Denkinger5.
Abstract
The detection of circulating free DNA (cfDNA) has transformed the field of oncology and prenatal diagnostics. Clinical application of cfDNA for disease diagnosis and monitoring, however, is relatively recent in the field of infectious disease. The potential of cfDNA as a noninvasive diagnostic and monitoring tool is especially promising for tuberculosis (TB), as it enables the detection of both pulmonary and extrapulmonary TB from easily accessible urine and/or blood samples from any age group. However, despite the potential of cfDNA detection to identify TB, very few studies are described in the literature to date. A comprehensive search of the literature identified 15 studies that report detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA in the blood and urine of TB patients with nongenitourinary disease, but in only six of them were the methodological steps considered suitable for cfDNA isolation and detection. The sensitivities and specificities for the diagnosis of pulmonary and extrapulmonary TB cases reported in these six studies are highly variable, falling in the range of 29% to 79% and 67% to 100%, respectively. While most studies could not meet the performance requirements of the high-priority target product profiles (TPP) published by the World Health Organization (WHO), the study results nonetheless show promise for a point-of-care detection assay. Better designed prospective studies, using appropriate samples, will be required to validate cfDNA as a TB biomarker.Entities:
Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosis; diagnosis; liquid biopsy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30404942 PMCID: PMC6440766 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.01234-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948
FIG 1Schematic drawing of the origin, release, and potential diagnostic use of M. tuberculosis cfDNA within the human host. M. tuberculosis within the lungs or in extrapulmonary sites release cell-free DNA into the blood circulation, which then may be redistributed in some other biological fluids that can serve as a sample for in vitro diagnostic (IVD) tests (2, 9, 56–62).
cfDNA isolation methodology of studies on blood- and urine-based cfDNA detection of M. tuberculosis by nucleic acid amplification techniques in which the methodological steps are a priori considered suitable for cfDNA isolation and detection,
| Publication’s first author | Yr | Sample type | Centrifugation, urine supernate collection | Preservative/storage | DNA extraction method | Test type | Target(s) | Amplicon target size(s) (bp) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ushio | 2016 | Plasma | NA | EDTA/NR | Qiagen DNeasy blood and tissue kit | Digital PCR | IS6110, gyrB | 71 |
| Click | 2018 | Plasma | NA | EDTA/NR | QiaAmp circulating nucleic acid kit | qPCR | IS6110 | 106 |
| Cannas | 2008 | Urine | Yes | EDTA/NR | Manual/resin | Nested PCR | IS6110 | 67 and 129 |
| Fortun | 2014 | Urine | NR | NR/NR | NR | TMA | 16S rRNA | NR |
| Labugger | 2017 | Urine | Yes | EDTA/NR | Manual/resin | PCR | IS6110 | 38 |
| Patel | 2017 | Urine | NR | EDTA/NR | Manual/resin | PCR | DR region | 38 |
See references 23, 24, 25, 32, 33, and 34.
Two additional studies reported one case report (63, 64). Both studies describe the identification of urinary M. tuberculosis cfDNA in extrapulmonary TB cases; the first refers to a disseminated TB case while the second to a pediatric tubercular otitis media case. Sample preanalytical steps were performed as reported in the Ushio et al. study and Cannas et al. study, respectively (63, 64). Data from these studies were not included here given that only samples from an individual patient were available.
NR, not reported; NA, not applicable; TMA, transcription-mediated amplification; DR, direct repeat.
Performance estimates of studies on blood- and urine-based cfDNA detection of M. tuberculosis by nucleic acid amplification techniques in which the methodological steps are a priori considered suitable for cfDNA isolation and detection
| Publication first author | Yr | Sample type | TB presentation | HIV positive (%) | Smear positive (%) | Method of TB confirmation | % (no./total no. of samples) of indicating: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | Specificity | |||||||
| Ushio | 2016 | Plasma | Pulmonary | 0 | 100 | Culture | 65 (21/33) | 93 (18/19) |
| 29 (10/33) | 100 (19/19) | |||||||
| Click | 2018 | Plasma | Pulmonary | 64 | 100 | Culture and/or Xpert | 45 (18/40) | 67 (2/3) |
| Cannas | 2008 | Urine | Pulmonary | 5 | 95 | Sputum smear or culture | 79 (34/43) | 100 (23/23) |
| Fortun | 2014 | Urine | Pulmonary | 12 | NR | Culture | 18 (5/28) | NR |
| Extrapulmonary | 29 | NR | 70 (57/82) | NR | ||||
| Labugger | 2017 | Urine | Pulmonary | 0 | 60 | Culture | 64 (7/11) | 100 (8/8) |
| Patel | 2017 | Urine | Pulmonary | 38 | 33 | Culture | 43 (75/175) | 89 (210/237) |
See references 23, 24, 25, 32, 33, and 34.
NR, not reported; Xpert, Xpert MTB/RIF assay.
FIG 2Performance (sensitivity versus specificity) of studies on blood and urine-based cfDNA detection of M. tuberculosis by nucleic acid amplification techniques in which the methodological steps are a priori considered suitable for cfDNA isolation and detection. Studies reporting only the sensitivity or specificity are excluded (23–25, 32–34). TPP, target product profile.
Research gaps for the development of a cfDNA-based IVD test related to preanalytical factors
| Research gaps: lack of standard operating procedures for cfDNA preanalytical steps, especially for urinary samples |
| Which is the best extraction kit/method for different sample types? |
| How rapidly do samples need to be processed to avoid degradation with and without preservatives? |
| Which urine preservative works best to avoid cfDNA degradation? |
| How long can plasma samples and urinary samples with preservatives be stored? |
| How long can cfDNA extracts be stored at −20°C and −80°C? |