| Literature DB >> 30805325 |
Mohamed I M Ahmed1,2,3, Christian Ziegler4, Kathrin Held1,2, Ilja Dubinski5, Julia Ley-Zaporozhan6, Christof Geldmacher1,2, Ulrich von Both1,5,7.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) epidemiology is changing in Western and Central Europe due to the rise in immigration and refugees fleeing high-TB-burden areas of war and devastation. The change in local demography and the lack of sensitive and specific TB diagnostic and monitoring tools, especially for cases of childhood TB, leads to either missed cases or over-treatment of this group. Here we present a promising new diagnostic approach, the T cell activation marker (TAM)-TB assay, and its performance in a case of extra-pulmonary TB occurring in a 16 year old refugee from Afghanistan. This assay is based on the characterization of 3 activation markers (CD38, HLA-DR, and Ki67) and one maturation marker (CD27) on M. tuberculosis-specific CD4 T cells. It was performed at time-points T0 (10 days), T1 (1 month), T2 (6 months), and T3 (12 months) post-treatment initiation. All markers were able to detect active tuberculosis (aTB) within this patient at T0 and reverted to a healthy/LTBI phenotype at the end of treatment. Tantalizingly, there was a clear trend toward the healthy/LTBI phenotype for the markers at T1 and T2, indicating a potential role in monitoring anti-TB treatment in the future. This assay may therefore contribute to improved TB diagnostic algorithms and TB treatment monitoring, potentially allowing for individualization of TB treatment duration in the future.Entities:
Keywords: TAM-TB assay; TB diagnostics; extra-pulmonary tuberculosis; pediatric tuberculosis; treatment monitoring
Year: 2019 PMID: 30805325 PMCID: PMC6378289 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2019.00027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Initial X-ray of the left hip showed blurring of the cortical margins of the femoral head and acetabulum, slight demineralization, and a bulging fat pad surrounding the hip suggesting a joint effusion (A). On the initial MRI scans there was a hyper intensity of the left hip and acetabulum (=oedema of the bone marrow) as well as marked joint effusion on the T2 weighted image with fat suppression (B), synovial thickening and enhancement on the post-contrast T1 weighted image with fat suppression (C). These MRI findings were receding following 13 months of anti-TB treatment (T2 weighted image with fat suppression, D) on the one hand, but on the other hand a severe narrowing of the joint space, osteophytes and severe deformity of the femoral head became present. These findings of secondary osteoarthrosis were also demonstrated on the follow-up X-ray few months later (E).
Figure 2Marker expression on MTB-specific CD4 T cells. Values are provided at the start, during and at the end of treatment. Frequency of ESAT-6/CFP-10 stimulated MTB-specific CD4 T cells expressing the markers CD38 (A), CD27 (B), HLA-DR (C), Ki67 (D), and PPD stimulated MTB-specific CD4 T cells expressing CD38 (E), CD27 (F), HLA-DR (G), Ki67 (H) are displayed as red dots at 10 days (T0), 1 month (T1), 6 months (T2), and 12 months (T3) after TB treatment initiation; data from subjects with acute pulmonary tuberculosis and healthy/latent TB infection were included as reference (box and whisker plots). Red area represents the region considered to show an active TB profile with cut-offs based on ROC analysis; ROC cut-off values for ESAT-6/CFP-10, CD38 = 44.9, CD27 = 22.1, HLA-DR = 33.15, Ki67 = 2.43 and for PPD, CD38 = 31.55, CD27 = 18.35, HLA-DR = 35.7, Ki67 = 3.67 (14).