Liu, C.; Lyon, C. J.; Bu, Y.; Deng, Z.; Walters, E.; Li, Y.; Zhang, L.; Hesseling, A. C.; Graviss, E. A.; Hu, Y. "Clinical Evaluation of a Blood Assay to Diagnose Paucibacillary Tuberculosis via Bacterial Antigens". Clinical Chemistry 2018, 64, 791-800.
Abstract
"The diagnosis of active tuberculosis (TB) cases primarily relies on methods that detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) bacilli or their DNA in patient samples (e.g., mycobacterial culture and Xpert MTB/RIF assays), but these tests have low clinical sensitivity for patients with paucibacillary TB disease. Our goal was to evaluate the clinical performance of a newly developed assay that can rapidly diagnose active TB cases by direct detection of Mtb-derived antigens in patients blood samples.Nanoparticle (NanoDisk)-enriched peptides derived from the Mtb virulence factors CFP-10 (10-kDa culture factor protein) and ESAT-6 (6-kDa early secretory antigenic target) were analyzed by high-throughput mass spectrometry (MS). Serum from 294 prospectively enrolled Chinese adults were analyzed with this NanoDisk-MS method to evaluate the performance of direct serum Mtb antigen measurement as a means for rapid diagnosis of active TB cases.NanoDisk-MS diagnosed 174 (88.3\%) of the study s TB cases, with 95.8\% clinical specificity, and with 91.6\% and 85.3\% clinical sensitivity for culture-positive and culture-negative TB cases, respectively. NanoDisk-MS also exhibited 88\% clinical sensitivity for pulmonary and 90\% for extrapulmonary TB, exceeding the diagnostic performance of mycobacterial culture for these cases.Direct detection and quantification of serum Mtb antigens by NanoDisk-MS can rapidly and accurately diagnose active TB in adults, independent of disease site or culture status, and outperform Mycobacterium-based TB diagnostics."
Last updated on 09/14/2022