| Literature DB >> 30701001 |
Elena A Usacheva1,2, Lance R Peterson1,2, Katherine Mendoza1, Donna M Schora1, M Moazzem Hossain3, Jian-Ping Jin3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current diagnostics of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) heavily relies on detection of the disease-causing organism. The objective of this study was to investigate a cytoskeletal protein, tropomyosin (Tpm), as a CDI biomarker.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Clostridium difficile infection; Diagnostics; Tropomyosin
Year: 2019 PMID: 30701001 PMCID: PMC6340674 DOI: 10.14740/jocmr3696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med Res ISSN: 1918-3003
Figure 1Schematic experimental design and evaluation of tropomyosin (Tpm) as a Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) biomarker.
Figure 2Distribution of samples tested for tropomyosin. CDI: C. difficile infection; ID: an infectious disease physician; OEP: other enteric pathogens; “Tpm-”: tropomyosin is not detected; “Tpm+”: tropomyosin is detected; “CDI+”: specimens tested positive by rtPCR (the Xpert® C. difficile/Epi, Cepheid); “CDI-”: specimens tested negative by rtPCR (the Xpert® C. difficile/Epi, Cepheid); “true CDI”: compatible with CDI according to the reference approach (microbiology and clinical evaluation); “not CDI”: deviated from the reference approach; “Uncertain”: specimens tested positive by PCR but the diagnosis is inconclusive; “Consented”: sample was collected from consented patient. In the groups of “CDI-” and “OEP”, clinical signs were evaluated only for “Tpm+” samples.
Tpm Detection and Distribution Within “CDI+” Group
| True CDI, n | Not CDI, n | Uncertain diagnosis, n | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tpm positive | 36 | 3 | 6 | 45 (24%) |
| Tpm negative | 31 | 40 | 72 | 143 (76%) |
| Total | 67 (35.6%) | 43 (23%) | 78 (41.5%) | 188 |
In brackets % of total samples in corresponding categories from total samples in “CDI+” group. Underlined numbers are the most important indications. “true CDI” - “CDI+” subgroup: it denotes specimens collected from patients clinically evaluated as having real infection. “not CDI” - “CDI+” subgroup: it denotes samples collected from patients tested positive by PCR but CDI diagnosis was not confirmed. “Uncertain diagnosis”: specimens tested positive by PCR but the diagnosis is inconclusive.
Tpm Detection and Distribution Within “CDI+” Group in Inpatients
| True CDI, n | Not CDI, n | Uncertain diagnosis, n | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tpm positive | 9 | 1 | 1 | 11 |
| Tpm negative | 9 | 13 | 16 | 38 |
| Total | 18 | 14 | 17 | 49 |
“true CDI” - “CDI+” subgroup: it denotes specimens collected from inpatients clinically evaluated as having real infection. “not CDI” - “CDI+” subgroup: it denotes samples collected from inpatients tested positive by PCR but CDI diagnosis was not confirmed. “Uncertain diagnosis”: specimens tested positive by PCR, but diagnosis is inconclusive.
Figure 3Detection of non-muscle tropomyison (Tpm) in stool samples. Samples #8-11 were collected from CDI patients. Samples #9-11 are positive for Tpm (upper bend). #11a: after the treatment, upper band is disappeared. The mixture of anti-Tpm antibodies (Abs) is comprised of monoclonal antibodies for Tpm1, Tpm 5, and chicken leg muscle Tpm. To control a loading amount of proteins an equal amount of stool starting material was always used for Tpm crude extraction.
Clinical Stool Specimens Tested for Tropomyosin (Tpm)
| Tested samples, n | Tpm positive, n (%, in corresponding category) | Samples with available clinical signs, n | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CDI- | 228 | 22 (9.7) | 19* |
| CDI+ | 230 | 56 (24.3) | 188 |
| OEP | 52 | 12 (23) | 10* |
| Total | 510 | 90 (17.7) | 217 |
*: only Tpm-positive samples; CDI+: remnant diarrheal stool specimens submitted to clinical microbiology laboratory that tested positive for C. difficile toxin DNA by PCR method (Xpert® C. difficile/Epi); CDI-: emnant diarrheal stool specimens submitted to clinical microbiology laboratory that tested negative for C. difficile toxin DNA by PCR method (Xpert® C. difficile/Epi); OEP: specimens tested for the presence of other enteric pathogens or parasites by routine testing methods.
Summary of Fecal Inflammatory Biomarkers as Possible Predictors of CDI Disease*
| Biomarker | Clinical indication/prediction | Role in immunopathogenesis | Specific/sensitive to CDI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lactoferrin | Colonic inflammation, CDI severity (when the level is elevated) | The innate inflammatory response; related to level of neutrophils translocation | no/no |
| Calprotectin | Intestinal inflammatory conditions (when the level is elevated); CDI severity | The innate inflammatory response: correlates with level of released neutrophils | no/no |
| IL-8 | CDI severity (when elevated) | Involved in the recruitment of neutrophils to sites of infection | no/yes |
| IL-23 | May relate to CDI recurrence (when the level is decreased) | The lack of a robust immunological response | no/no |
| pMK2 | The presence of toxigenic | A key mediator of p38-dependent inflammation | no/- |
| pp38 | Symptomatic CDI in pediatrics (when the level is elevated) | Activation of p38 protein pathway | yes/no |
*: adapted from reference [10]. Permission was granted. pMK2: pyruvate kinase M2; IL-8: interleukin-8.