Pulmonary
tuberculosis is the most common manifestation of tuberculosis, and
to this day, sputum smear microscopy remains the most widely used
diagnostic test in resource-limited settings despite its suboptimal
sensitivity. Here we report the development of two DNA aptamer-based
diagnostic tests, namely aptamer linked immobilized sorbent assay
(Aptamer ALISA) and electrochemical sensor (ECS), for the direct detection
of a TB biomarker HspX in sputum. First we compared the performance
of Aptamer ALISA with anti-HspX polyclonal antibody-based enzyme linked
immunosorbent assay (Antibody ELISA) in a blinded study of 314 sputum
specimens. Aptamer ALISA displayed a high sensitivity of 94.1% (95%
CI 86.8–98%) as compared to 68.2% sensitivity (95% CI 57.2–77.9%)
of Antibody ELISA (p-value < 0.05) using culture
as the reference standard without compromising test specificity of
100%. Out of nine smear-negative culture-positive samples, six were
positive by Aptamer ALISA and only two were detected by Antibody ELISA.
ALISA detected as positive 80 of 85 culture-positive TB as compared
to 57 of 81 diagnosed as TB by X-ray (p-value <
0.0001). These findings demonstrate the superiority of the aptamer-based
test over smear microscopy, antibody-based ELISA, and chest X-ray
for TB detection (p-value < 0.0001 for all). Further,
we have developed a ∼30 min point-of-care ECS test that discriminates
between tuberculous and nontuberculous sputum with a sensitivity of
∼92.3% and specificity of 91.2%. The tests developed in the
current study cost ∼$1–3/test and have potential utility
in active case finding in high-risk groups and screening for pulmonary
TB among presumptive TB subjects.
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