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Using ELISPOT to Expose False Positive Skin Test Conversion in Tuberculosis Contacts

BACKGROUND: Repeat tuberculin skin tests may be false positive due to boosting of waned immunity to past mycobacterial exposure. We evaluated whether an ELISPOT test could identify tuberculosis (TB) contacts with boosting of immunity to non-tuberculous mycobacterial exposure. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL F...

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Autores principales: Hill, Philip C., Jeffries, David J., Brookes, Roger H., Fox, Annette, Jackson-Sillah, Dolly, Lugos, Moses D., Donkor, Simon A., de Jong, Bouke C., Corrah, Tumani, Adegbola, Richard A., McAdam, Keith P.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1779806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17264885
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000183
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author Hill, Philip C.
Jeffries, David J.
Brookes, Roger H.
Fox, Annette
Jackson-Sillah, Dolly
Lugos, Moses D.
Donkor, Simon A.
de Jong, Bouke C.
Corrah, Tumani
Adegbola, Richard A.
McAdam, Keith P.
author_facet Hill, Philip C.
Jeffries, David J.
Brookes, Roger H.
Fox, Annette
Jackson-Sillah, Dolly
Lugos, Moses D.
Donkor, Simon A.
de Jong, Bouke C.
Corrah, Tumani
Adegbola, Richard A.
McAdam, Keith P.
author_sort Hill, Philip C.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Repeat tuberculin skin tests may be false positive due to boosting of waned immunity to past mycobacterial exposure. We evaluated whether an ELISPOT test could identify tuberculosis (TB) contacts with boosting of immunity to non-tuberculous mycobacterial exposure. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We conducted tuberculin and ELISPOT tests in 1665 TB contacts: 799 were tuberculin test negative and were offered a repeat test after three months. Those with tuberculin test conversion had an ELISPOT, chest X-ray and sputum analysis if appropriate. We compared converters with non-converters, assessed the probability of each of four combinations of ELISPOT results over the two time points and estimated boosting with adjustment for ELISPOT sensitivity and specificity. 704 (72%) contacts had a repeat tuberculin test; 176 (25%) had test conversion, which increased with exposure to a case (p = 0.002), increasing age (p = 0.0006) and BCG scar (p = 0.06). 114 tuberculin test converters had ELISPOT results: 16(14%) were recruitment positive/follow-up positive, 9 (8%) positive/negative, 34 (30%) negative/positive, and 55 (48%) were negative/negative. There was a significant non-linear effect of age for ELISPOT results in skin test converters (p = 0.038). Estimates of boosting ranged from 32%–41% of skin test converters with increasing age. Three converters were diagnosed with TB, two had ELISPOT results: both were positive, including one at recruitment. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We estimate that approximately one third of tuberculin skin test conversion in Gambian TB case contacts is due to boosting of immunity to non-tuberculous mycobacterial exposure. Further longitudinal studies are required to confirm whether ELISPOT can reliably identify case contacts with tuberculin test conversion that would benefit most from prophylactic treatment.
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spelling pubmed-17798062007-01-31 Using ELISPOT to Expose False Positive Skin Test Conversion in Tuberculosis Contacts Hill, Philip C. Jeffries, David J. Brookes, Roger H. Fox, Annette Jackson-Sillah, Dolly Lugos, Moses D. Donkor, Simon A. de Jong, Bouke C. Corrah, Tumani Adegbola, Richard A. McAdam, Keith P. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Repeat tuberculin skin tests may be false positive due to boosting of waned immunity to past mycobacterial exposure. We evaluated whether an ELISPOT test could identify tuberculosis (TB) contacts with boosting of immunity to non-tuberculous mycobacterial exposure. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We conducted tuberculin and ELISPOT tests in 1665 TB contacts: 799 were tuberculin test negative and were offered a repeat test after three months. Those with tuberculin test conversion had an ELISPOT, chest X-ray and sputum analysis if appropriate. We compared converters with non-converters, assessed the probability of each of four combinations of ELISPOT results over the two time points and estimated boosting with adjustment for ELISPOT sensitivity and specificity. 704 (72%) contacts had a repeat tuberculin test; 176 (25%) had test conversion, which increased with exposure to a case (p = 0.002), increasing age (p = 0.0006) and BCG scar (p = 0.06). 114 tuberculin test converters had ELISPOT results: 16(14%) were recruitment positive/follow-up positive, 9 (8%) positive/negative, 34 (30%) negative/positive, and 55 (48%) were negative/negative. There was a significant non-linear effect of age for ELISPOT results in skin test converters (p = 0.038). Estimates of boosting ranged from 32%–41% of skin test converters with increasing age. Three converters were diagnosed with TB, two had ELISPOT results: both were positive, including one at recruitment. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We estimate that approximately one third of tuberculin skin test conversion in Gambian TB case contacts is due to boosting of immunity to non-tuberculous mycobacterial exposure. Further longitudinal studies are required to confirm whether ELISPOT can reliably identify case contacts with tuberculin test conversion that would benefit most from prophylactic treatment. Public Library of Science 2007-01-31 /pmc/articles/PMC1779806/ /pubmed/17264885 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000183 Text en Hill et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hill, Philip C.
Jeffries, David J.
Brookes, Roger H.
Fox, Annette
Jackson-Sillah, Dolly
Lugos, Moses D.
Donkor, Simon A.
de Jong, Bouke C.
Corrah, Tumani
Adegbola, Richard A.
McAdam, Keith P.
Using ELISPOT to Expose False Positive Skin Test Conversion in Tuberculosis Contacts
title Using ELISPOT to Expose False Positive Skin Test Conversion in Tuberculosis Contacts
title_full Using ELISPOT to Expose False Positive Skin Test Conversion in Tuberculosis Contacts
title_fullStr Using ELISPOT to Expose False Positive Skin Test Conversion in Tuberculosis Contacts
title_full_unstemmed Using ELISPOT to Expose False Positive Skin Test Conversion in Tuberculosis Contacts
title_short Using ELISPOT to Expose False Positive Skin Test Conversion in Tuberculosis Contacts
title_sort using elispot to expose false positive skin test conversion in tuberculosis contacts
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1779806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17264885
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000183
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