| Literature DB >> 35711276 |
Kenneth Ssebambulidde1, Jane Gakuru1, Jayne Ellis1,2, Fiona V Cresswell1,2,3, Nathan C Bahr4.
Abstract
Diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis (TBM) remains challenging due to a paucity of high-performance diagnostics. Even those that have reasonable sensitivity are not adequate to 'rule out' TBM. Therefore, a combination of clinical factors alongside microbiological, molecular, and radiological investigations are utilized, depending on availability. A low threshold for starting empiric therapy in the appropriate clinical scenario remains crucial for good outcomes in many cases. Herein, we review the current TBM diagnostics landscape with a focus on limitations frequently encountered, such as diagnostic test performance, cost, laboratory infrastructure, and clinical expertise. Though molecular technologies, particularly GeneXpert MTB/Rif Ultra, have been a step forward, diagnosis of TBM remains difficult. We also provide an overview of promising technologies, such as cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lactate, a new lipoarabinomannan test (FujiLAM), metagenomic next-generation sequencing, and transcriptomics that may further improve our TBM diagnostic capacity and lead to better outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: TB meningitis; cerebrospinal fluid; diagnostic testing; molecular testing; tuberculosis; tuberculous meningitis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35711276 PMCID: PMC9195574 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.892224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.086
Figure 1Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for tuberculous meningitis (TBM) diagnosis. These are selected images from a brain MRI obtained from a patient with definite TBM showing cerebral space occupying lesions (tuberculomas) in the brainstem (A–C) and frontal lobe along with white matter ischemic changes (B).
Uniform case definition (12).
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| Symptom duration of more than 5 days | 4 |
| Systemic symptoms suggestive of tuberculosis (1 or more of the following): weight loss (or poor weight gain in children), night sweats, or persistent cough for more than 2 weeks | 2 |
| History of recent (within past year) close contact with an individual with pulmonary tuberculosis or a positive TST or IGRA (only in children <10 years of age) | 2 |
| Focal neurological deficit (excluding cranial nerve palsies) | 2 |
| Cranial nerve palsy | 1 |
| Altered consciousness | 1 |
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| CSF appearance | 1 |
| Cells: 10–500 per uL | 1 |
| Lymphocyte predominance (>50%) | 1 |
| Protein concentration >1 g/L | 1 |
| CSF to plasma glucose ratio of <50% or an absolute CSF glucose concentration <2.2 mmol/L | 1 |
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| Hydrocephalus | 1 |
| Basal meningeal enhancement | 2 |
| Tuberculoma | 2 |
| Infarct | 1 |
| Pre-contrast hyperdensity | 2 |
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| Chest radiograph suggestive of active tuberculosis: signs of tuberculosis =2, miliary tuberculosis =4 | 2/4 |
| CT/MRI/ultrasound evidence of tuberculosis outside the CNS | 2 |
| AFB identified or Mycobacteria tuberculosis cultured from another source i.e., sputum, lymph node, gastric washing, urine, blood culture | 4 |
| Positive commercial M. tuberculosis NAAT from extra-neural specimen | 4 |
TST, tuberculosis skin test; IGRA, interferon-gamma release assay; NAAT, nucleic acid amplification test; AFB, acid fast bacilli; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; CNS, central nervous system; CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Diagnostic performance for selected tests for tuberculous meningitis (TBM).
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| Culture | <10 CFU (Liquid media) 10–100 (Solid media) | 50–70 | 100 | Consensus case definitions | Cost, infrastructure, TAT, sensitivity | ( |
| AFB smear | 10,000 | 10–20 | 100 | Culture | Sensitivity, user variability | ( |
| Xpert | ~110 | 71.1 (62.8–79.1) | 96.9 (95.4–98) | Culture | Cost, infrastructure, sensitivity | ( |
| Xpert Ultra | ~10–15 | 89.4 (79.1–95.6) | 91.2 (83.2–95.7) | Culture | Cost, infrastructure | ( |
| CSF Alere LAM | Not available | 22–33 | 94–96 | Xpert Ultra or culture | Sensitivity | ( |
| CSF FujiLAM | Not available | 74 (56–87) | 91 (82–97) | Consensus case definitions | Replication of study, possibly cost, not commercially available | ( |
AFB, Acid fast bacilli; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; LAM, lipoarabinomannan; TBM, tuberculous meningitis; CFU, colony forming units; 95% CI, 95% confidence intervals; TAT, turnaround time.
*None of the tests have adequate negative predictive value to “rule-out” TB meningitis.