Cerebrospinal t-cell responses aid in the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis in a human immunodeficiency virus- and tuberculosis-endemic population

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Abstract

Rationale: Current tools for the rapid diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis (TBM) are suboptimal. We evaluated the clinical utility of a quantitative RD-1 IFN-γ T-cell enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay (T-SPOT.TB), using cerebrospinal fluid cells for the rapid immunodiagnosis of TBM. Objectives: To evaluate the diagnostic utility of the RD1 antigen-specific ELISPOT assay for the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis. Methods: The ELISPOT assay was evaluated in 150 patients with suspected TBM who were categorized as definite-TBM, probable-TBM, and non-TBM. Culture or polymerase chain reaction positivity for Mycobacerium tuberculosis served as the reference standard. To determine the diagnostic value of the ELISPOT assay, a clinical prediction rule was derived from baseline clinical and laboratory parameters using a multivariable regression model. Measurements and Main Results: A total of 140 patients (81% HIV-infected; median CD4 count, 160 cells/mm3) were included in the final analysis. When comparing the definite-TBM (n = 38) and non-TBM groups (n = 48), the ELISPOT assay (cut point of ≥228 spot-forming cells per 1 million mononuclear cells) was a useful rule-in test: sensitivity 58% (95% confidence interval [CI], 41-74); specificity 94% (95% CI, 83-99). However, ELISPOT outcomes improved when other rapid tests were concurrently used to exclude bacterial (Gram stain) and cryptococcal meningitis (latex-agglutination test) within the non-TBM group. Using this approach, the ELISPOT assay (cut point of ≥46 spot-forming cells) was an excellent rule-in test: sensitivity 82% (95% CI, 66-92); specificity 100% (95% CI, 78-100); positive predictive value, 100% (95% CI, 89-100); negative predictive value, 68% (95% CI, 45-86); area under the curve, 0.90. The ELISPOT assay had incremental diagnostic value compared with the clinical prediction rule. Conclusions: The RD-1 ELISPOT assay, using cerebrospinal fluid mononuclear cells and in conjunction with other rapid confirmatory tests (Gram stain and cryptococcal latex-agglutination test), is an accurate rapid rule-in test for TBM in a TB and HIV endemic setting.

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Patel, V. B., Singh, R., Connolly, C., Coovadia, Y., Peer, A. K. C., Parag, P., … Dheda, K. (2010). Cerebrospinal t-cell responses aid in the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis in a human immunodeficiency virus- and tuberculosis-endemic population. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 182(4), 569–577. https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.200912-1931OC

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