| Literature DB >> 30619306 |
James A Seddon1,2, Silvia S Chiang3,4, Hanif Esmail5,6, Anna K Coussens6,7,8,9.
Abstract
In high burden settings, the risk of infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis increases throughout childhood due to cumulative exposure. However, the risk of progressing from tuberculosis (TB) infection to disease varies by age. Young children (<5 years) have high risk of disease progression following infection. The risk falls in primary school children (5 to <10 years), but rises again during puberty. TB disease phenotype also varies by age: generally, young children have intrathoracic lymph node disease or disseminated disease, while adolescents (10 to <20 years) have adult-type pulmonary disease. TB risk also exhibits a gender difference: compared to adolescent boys, adolescent girls have an earlier rise in disease progression risk and higher TB incidence until early adulthood. Understanding why primary school children, during what we term the "Wonder Years," have low TB risk has implications for vaccine development, therapeutic interventions, and diagnostics. To understand why this group is at low risk, we need a better comprehension of why younger children and adolescents have higher risks, and why risk varies by gender. Immunological response to M. tuberculosis is central to these issues. Host response at key stages in the immunopathological interaction with M. tuberculosis influences risk and disease phenotype. Cell numbers and function change dramatically with age and sexual maturation. Young children have poorly functioning innate cells and a Th2 skew. During the "Wonder Years," there is a lymphocyte predominance and a Th1 skew. During puberty, neutrophils become more central to host response, and CD4+ T cells increase in number. Sex hormones (dehydroepiandrosterone, adiponectin, leptin, oestradiol, progesterone, and testosterone) profoundly affect immunity. Compared to girls, boys have a stronger Th1 profile and increased numbers of CD8+ T cells and NK cells. Girls are more Th2-skewed and elicit more enhanced inflammatory responses. Non-immunological factors (including exposure intensity, behavior, and co-infections) may impact disease. However, given the consistent patterns seen across time and geography, these factors likely are less central. Strategies to protect children and adolescents from TB may need to differ by age and sex. Further work is required to better understand the contribution of age and sex to M. tuberculosis immunity.Entities:
Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosis; adolescence; children; immunity; infection; protection; tuberculosis; vaccination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30619306 PMCID: PMC6300506 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Conceptual framework to demonstrate the pattern of change in tuberculosis incidence with age. This represents a composite of risk of infection and risk of subsequent disease progression. The presentation of disease is demonstrated by a representative X-ray in a box colored according to the disease phenotype legend.
Age-related risks of progression to and mortality from tuberculosis disease.
| Minneapolis, MN, U.S.A. ( | 1921–1941 | Cohort study | 3,612 | TST positivity at enrollment or TST-conversion during follow-up; TST positivity defined as induration of ≥5 mm to 0.1 or 1.0 mg of old tuberculin | “Clinical TB,” not including “primary pulmonary infiltrates” on CXR in the absence of symptoms | 257 (age 0 to <1); | 48 (age 5 to <6); | 49 (age 10 to <11); | 50 (age 15 to <16); |
| Massachusetts, U.S.A. ( | 1924–1934; f/u period 1–12 (mean 11.4) years | Cohort study | 64,834 | Positive reaction (not further defined) to the von Pirquet tuberculin test | (1) All cases and deaths that were reported in Massachusetts from 1924 to 1936 and matched one of the individuals in the cohort, or (2) radiographic and clinical diagnosis of TB in a subset with follow-up exams | n/a | 0.4 | 1.7 | 3.7 |
| London, U.K. ( | 1930–1954; f/u period 2–25 (mean 9) years | Cohort study | 1,567 | History of contact with TB case; no TST required for study entry | Children developing tuberculous lesions, further divided into intrathoracic and extrathoracic | 608 | 432 | 409 | n/a |
| Kinn Administrative District, Norway ( | 1937–1944; f/u period through 1945 | Survey | 152 | ≥3 mm induration to the von Pirquet tuberculin test | TB disease diagnosed through clinical symptoms, signs, and radiology | 778 (age 0 to <7) | 778 (age 0 to <7); | 603 (age 7 to <15) | 583 (age 15 to <20) |
| Newcastle-upon Tyne-and Northumberland, U.K. ( | 1941–1961; f/u period 1–10 years | Cohort study and literature review | 2,376 | 8 different studies included; each study used slightly different entry criteria | Diagnoses of TB meningitis, miliary TB, pleural TB, skeletal TB, or pulmonary TB | 447 (0 to <1); | 265 (0 to <7) | n/a | n/a |
| Brentwood, Essex, U.K. ( | 1942–1953; f/u period 5–10 years | Cohort study | 317 | Diagnosis of simple primary TB | Complications, including pulmonary TB, grave haematogenous TB, and other extrapulmonary disease | 150 (age <2); | 144 | 177 | n/a |
| Puerto Rico, U.S.A. ( | 1949–1969; f/u period 18–20 years | Control arm of BCG vaccine trial | 82,269 | No receipt of BCG vaccine and ≥6 mm induration to 1 or 10 units of PPD | TB disease confirmed by death certificates, case reports, and reports of admission to TB hospitals and clinics | 1.648 (age 1 to <7) | 1.648 (age 1 to <7); 0.77 (age 7 to <13) | 0.77 (age 7 to <13); 0.946 (age 13 to <19) | 0.946 (age 13 to <19) |
| Philadelphia, PA, U.S.A. ( | 1920 | Epidemiologic survey | Not specified | All white children in Philadelphia (including children without TB disease) | Death from all forms of TB, data source not specified | 0.33 (age <1), 0.14 (age 1 to <5) | 0.07 | 0.138 | 0.763 |
| Baltimore, MD, U.S.A. ( | 1928–1937; f/u period 1–10 years | Cohort study | 1,117 | Child contacts of TB cases (including children without TB disease) | Mortality from TB, data source not specified | Caucasians: 11.86 (age <1), 4.3 (age 1 to <5); African-Americans: 59.68 (age <1), 18.55 (age 1 to <5) | Caucasians: 0.88; African-Americans: 3.8 | Caucasians: 0; African-Americans: 2.77 | Caucasians: 7.54; African-Americans: 21.62 |
| Massachusetts, U.S.A. ( | 1930 | Epidemiologic survey | Not specified | All children in Massachusetts (including children without TB disease) | Deaths from all forms of TB, from U.S. Mortality Statistics | Males: 0.41; Females: 0.27 | Males: 0.11; Females: 0.13 | Males: 0.21; Females: 0.37 | |
| Kingsport, TN, U.S.A. ( | 1930–1931 | Epidemiologic survey | Not specified | All children (including healthy children) from 132 African-American households with TB | TB-related deaths reported from interviews with family members | 2.9 (age <1), 0.8 (age 1 to <5) | 1.6 | 4.2 | |
| Stockholm, Sweden ( | 1930–1938 | Cohort study | 453 | Diagnosis of primary TB | Death, data source not specified | 359 (age <1); | 44 (age 3 to <7); | 8 (age 7 to <16) | n/a |
| New York, NY, U.S.A. ( | 1930–1947 | Cohort study | 964 | Radiologic evidence of primary TB | Deaths from TB meningitis and other complications of primary TB, including disseminated forms and local progression of primary forms | 475 (age <0.5); | 150 | 210 | n/a |
| Brentwood, Essex, U.K. ( | 1942–1953; f/u period 5-10 years | Cohort study | 712 | Diagnosis of TB disease of any severity, including simple primary TB | Deaths from TB, data source not specified | 60 (age <2); | 1 | 40 | n/a |
Whereas, Marais and colleagues reported the entire study population in their 2004 review article, we are reporting the population from which the risk was calculated.
Risks given as per 1,000 persons rather than per 1,000 person-years.
These risks were extrapolated from a line graph in the original report, and age was defined at time of diagnosis of TB disease.
BCG, Bacillus Calmette-Guérin; CXR, chest radiography; f/u, follow-up; PPD, purified protein derivative; TB, tuberculosis; TST, tuberculin skin test.
Figure 2The Immunopathology of tuberculosis, demonstrating the host response at key stages in the host pathogen interaction and how age influences risk and disease phenotype. Transmission from an infectious case can lead to infection, which in turn encounters the innate immune response, the adaptive immune response, and, if not controlled, progresses to early and then late stage disease. The organism can be eliminated by either the innate or adaptive immune response. Young children are at increased risk of pathological lymph node enlargement and disseminated disease, whereas adolescents/adults are at increased risk of immunopathology. Pre-pubertal children are the most likely to contain M. tuberculosis.
Figure 3Change in tuberculosis risk throughout life stages compared to fluctuations in hormone levels, circulating cell populations (“Cells”), immune functions (“Immunity”), co-infections (“Infections”), and social interactions and behaviors (“Behavior”). TB risk is indicated by the gray shading with peaks of risk indicated underneath various life course stages. Images represent infections: mosquito, malaria; worm, helminths; virus, EBV, CMV, influenza; and behaviors: infant exposures to adult TB, children playing outdoors, smoking, drinking, sexual activity, pregnancy, Diabetes Mellites and old age. B, B cells; DC, dendritic cells; IFN, interferon; MN, monocytes; N, neutrophils; NK, natural killer cells; T, T lymphocytes; Th, T helper; Treg, regulatory T cells; WBC, white blood cells.
Impact of hormones on components of the immune system implicated in the immune response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, as reported in humans, animals, and in vitro models.
| Immune phenotype ( | Enhancing | Suppressive | Enhancing | Enhancing | Suppressive | Suppressive |
| T cell polarization ( | Th1 | Th1 | Th2 | Th2 | Th1 | |
| TNF expression | ||||||
| IL-12 expression | ||||||
| IL-1β, IL-6 expression ( | ||||||
| IFNα expression ( | ||||||
| Foam cell differentiation ( | ||||||
| Phagocytic activity ( | ||||||
| Microbial activity (iNOS, NO) ( | ||||||
| Autophagy of | ||||||
| Lung granuloma formation | ||||||
| MHC expression ( | ||||||
| CD1a+ expression ( | ||||||
| Numbers ( | ||||||
| Degranulation ( | ||||||
| Apoptosis ( | ||||||
| Phagocytosis ( | ||||||
| IFNγ expression ( | ||||||
| Th1 differentiation ( | ||||||
| Th2 ( | ||||||
| Th17 ( | ||||||
| FOXP3, Treg ( | ||||||
| Cytotoxicity of NK and CD8 ( | ||||||
| IFNγ expression from NK and CD8 ( | ||||||
| B cell proliferation, Antibody production ( | ||||||
DHEA(S), dehydroepiandrosterone (sulfate); IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; Mtb, Mycobacterium tuberculosis; NK, natural killer; NOS, nitric oxide synthase; Th, T helper; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; Treg, regulatory T cell. Red arrow indicates higher and blue arrow indicates lower, a blank box indicates no reported significant difference.
Also expressed by or involves dendritic cells and Th1 cells.
High levels of estrogen occur during the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle and during pregnancy.
Figure 4Immunological differences observed between males and females, post-puberty. TB disease risk increases as the immune response more heavily favors either Th2 or Th1 skewing, with a more balanced Th1/Th2 response having the lowest risk of disease progression. In general, males are Th1 skews and females Th2 skewed, although females have a higher inflammatory response to an exogenous stimulus, partly mediated by variable X-inactivation and the presence of estrogen response elements in many immune response genes, leading to higher responses once activated. BCR, B cell receptor; Ig, immunoglobulin; IL, interleukin; NK, natural killer; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; Th, T helper; TGFß, transforming growth factor-beta; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; #, number.