2009
DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00005309
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Utility of quantitative T-cell responsesversusunstimulated interferon-γ for the diagnosis of pleural tuberculosis

Abstract: The clinical utility of antigen-specific interferon (IFN)-c release assays (IGRAs) using pleural mononuclear cells, for the diagnosis of tuberculosis (TB), requires clarification.We compared the diagnostic utility of unstimulated pleural IFN-c levels with several pleural antigen-specific T-cell IGRAs (early secretory antigenic target-6 and culture filtrate protein-10 (T-SPOT.1TB, QuantiFERON1-TB Gold In-tube), purified protein derivative (PPD) and heparinbinding haemagglutinin (HBHA)) in 78 South African TB su… Show more

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Cited by 86 publications
(123 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
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“…This is similar to findings when using alveolar lavage cells in high- (22) and low-burden settings (23). In contrast, the specificity of the assay is poor in the pleural compartment (25) where patients with non-TB diagnoses (e.g., malignancy may have a high frequency of antigen-specific T cells). This may reflect the cellular translocation dynamics of different compartments, and in patients with LTBI there may be a compartment-specific leak of reactive T cells down a chemokine gradient (42).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 55%
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“…This is similar to findings when using alveolar lavage cells in high- (22) and low-burden settings (23). In contrast, the specificity of the assay is poor in the pleural compartment (25) where patients with non-TB diagnoses (e.g., malignancy may have a high frequency of antigen-specific T cells). This may reflect the cellular translocation dynamics of different compartments, and in patients with LTBI there may be a compartment-specific leak of reactive T cells down a chemokine gradient (42).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 55%
“…An alternative approach is to quantify the frequency of antigen-specific effector cells at the site of disease rather than in whole blood. This approach has recently been shown to be highly accurate when using bronchial alveolar lavage lymphocytes to diagnose pulmonary TB (22)(23)(24) but not when using site-specific lymphocytes to diagnose pleural TB (25). Case reports and small series suggest that this approach may also be useful for the diagnosis of TBM (26)(27)(28)(29).…”
Section: What This Study Adds To the Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…79 Commercial IFN-γ tests, T-SPOT.TB and QFT-IT in pleural fluid were compared to unstimulated IFN-γ for the diagnosis of pleural TB in 74 patients. 80 In 11 (15%) cases, the cell counts were not large enough to perform the tests. In the 63 remaining patients, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value were: for T-SPOT.TB, 86, 60, 84 and 64% respectively; for QFT-IT, 57, 80, 87 and 44% respectively, and for unstimulated IFN-γ, 97, 100, 100 and 94% respectively.…”
Section: Pleural Tuberculosismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the method is very sensitive, it was, using strict criteria for active infection, deemed not specific enough for the correct diagnosis of active pleural TB to be routinely recommended. Measurement of unstimulated interferon-c in pleural effusions could be more accurate to distinguish TB from non-TB aetiologies in regions of high TB incidence [12].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%