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Discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: A prospective cohort study

BACKGROUND: A nonsputum blood test capable of predicting progression of healthy individuals to active tuberculosis (TB) before clinical symptoms manifest would allow targeted treatment to curb transmission. We aimed to develop a proteomic biomarker of risk of TB progression for ultimate translation...

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Autores principales: Penn-Nicholson, Adam, Hraha, Thomas, Thompson, Ethan G., Sterling, David, Mbandi, Stanley Kimbung, Wall, Kirsten M., Fisher, Michelle, Suliman, Sara, Shankar, Smitha, Hanekom, Willem A., Janjic, Nebojsa, Hatherill, Mark, Kaufmann, Stefan H. E., Sutherland, Jayne, Walzl, Gerhard, De Groote, Mary Ann, Ochsner, Urs, Zak, Daniel E., Scriba, Thomas J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6467365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30990820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002781
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author Penn-Nicholson, Adam
Hraha, Thomas
Thompson, Ethan G.
Sterling, David
Mbandi, Stanley Kimbung
Wall, Kirsten M.
Fisher, Michelle
Suliman, Sara
Shankar, Smitha
Hanekom, Willem A.
Janjic, Nebojsa
Hatherill, Mark
Kaufmann, Stefan H. E.
Sutherland, Jayne
Walzl, Gerhard
De Groote, Mary Ann
Ochsner, Urs
Zak, Daniel E.
Scriba, Thomas J.
author_facet Penn-Nicholson, Adam
Hraha, Thomas
Thompson, Ethan G.
Sterling, David
Mbandi, Stanley Kimbung
Wall, Kirsten M.
Fisher, Michelle
Suliman, Sara
Shankar, Smitha
Hanekom, Willem A.
Janjic, Nebojsa
Hatherill, Mark
Kaufmann, Stefan H. E.
Sutherland, Jayne
Walzl, Gerhard
De Groote, Mary Ann
Ochsner, Urs
Zak, Daniel E.
Scriba, Thomas J.
author_sort Penn-Nicholson, Adam
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A nonsputum blood test capable of predicting progression of healthy individuals to active tuberculosis (TB) before clinical symptoms manifest would allow targeted treatment to curb transmission. We aimed to develop a proteomic biomarker of risk of TB progression for ultimate translation into a point-of-care diagnostic. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Proteomic TB risk signatures were discovered in a longitudinal cohort of 6,363 Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected, HIV-negative South African adolescents aged 12–18 years (68% female) who participated in the Adolescent Cohort Study (ACS) between July 6, 2005 and April 23, 2007, through either active (every 6 months) or passive follow-up over 2 years. Forty-six individuals developed microbiologically confirmed TB disease within 2 years of follow-up and were selected as progressors; 106 nonprogressors, who remained healthy, were matched to progressors. Over 3,000 human proteins were quantified in plasma with a highly multiplexed proteomic assay (SOMAscan). Three hundred sixty-one proteins of differential abundance between progressors and nonprogressors were identified. A 5-protein signature, TB Risk Model 5 (TRM5), was discovered in the ACS training set and verified by blind prediction in the ACS test set. Poor performance on samples 13–24 months before TB diagnosis motivated discovery of a second 3-protein signature, 3-protein pair-ratio (3PR) developed using an orthogonal strategy on the full ACS subcohort. Prognostic performance of both signatures was validated in an independent cohort of 1,948 HIV-negative household TB contacts from The Gambia (aged 15–60 years, 66% female), longitudinally followed up for 2 years between March 5, 2007 and October 21, 2010, sampled at baseline, month 6, and month 18. Amongst these contacts, 34 individuals progressed to microbiologically confirmed TB disease and were included as progressors, and 115 nonprogressors were included as controls. Prognostic performance of the TRM5 signature in the ACS training set was excellent within 6 months of TB diagnosis (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC] 0.96 [95% confidence interval, 0.93–0.99]) and 6–12 months (AUC 0.76 [0.65–0.87]) before TB diagnosis. TRM5 validated with an AUC of 0.66 (0.56–0.75) within 1 year of TB diagnosis in the Gambian validation cohort. The 3PR signature yielded an AUC of 0.89 (0.84–0.95) within 6 months of TB diagnosis and 0.72 (0.64–0.81) 7–12 months before TB diagnosis in the entire South African discovery cohort and validated with an AUC of 0.65 (0.55–0.75) within 1 year of TB diagnosis in the Gambian validation cohort. Signature validation may have been limited by a systematic shift in signal magnitudes generated by differences between the validation assay when compared to the discovery assay. Further validation, especially in cohorts from non-African countries, is necessary to determine how generalizable signature performance is. CONCLUSIONS: Both proteomic TB risk signatures predicted progression to incident TB within a year of diagnosis. To our knowledge, these are the first validated prognostic proteomic signatures. Neither meet the minimum criteria as defined in the WHO Target Product Profile for a progression test. More work is required to develop such a test for practical identification of individuals for investigation of incipient, subclinical, or active TB disease for appropriate treatment and care.
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spelling pubmed-64673652019-05-03 Discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: A prospective cohort study Penn-Nicholson, Adam Hraha, Thomas Thompson, Ethan G. Sterling, David Mbandi, Stanley Kimbung Wall, Kirsten M. Fisher, Michelle Suliman, Sara Shankar, Smitha Hanekom, Willem A. Janjic, Nebojsa Hatherill, Mark Kaufmann, Stefan H. E. Sutherland, Jayne Walzl, Gerhard De Groote, Mary Ann Ochsner, Urs Zak, Daniel E. Scriba, Thomas J. PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: A nonsputum blood test capable of predicting progression of healthy individuals to active tuberculosis (TB) before clinical symptoms manifest would allow targeted treatment to curb transmission. We aimed to develop a proteomic biomarker of risk of TB progression for ultimate translation into a point-of-care diagnostic. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Proteomic TB risk signatures were discovered in a longitudinal cohort of 6,363 Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected, HIV-negative South African adolescents aged 12–18 years (68% female) who participated in the Adolescent Cohort Study (ACS) between July 6, 2005 and April 23, 2007, through either active (every 6 months) or passive follow-up over 2 years. Forty-six individuals developed microbiologically confirmed TB disease within 2 years of follow-up and were selected as progressors; 106 nonprogressors, who remained healthy, were matched to progressors. Over 3,000 human proteins were quantified in plasma with a highly multiplexed proteomic assay (SOMAscan). Three hundred sixty-one proteins of differential abundance between progressors and nonprogressors were identified. A 5-protein signature, TB Risk Model 5 (TRM5), was discovered in the ACS training set and verified by blind prediction in the ACS test set. Poor performance on samples 13–24 months before TB diagnosis motivated discovery of a second 3-protein signature, 3-protein pair-ratio (3PR) developed using an orthogonal strategy on the full ACS subcohort. Prognostic performance of both signatures was validated in an independent cohort of 1,948 HIV-negative household TB contacts from The Gambia (aged 15–60 years, 66% female), longitudinally followed up for 2 years between March 5, 2007 and October 21, 2010, sampled at baseline, month 6, and month 18. Amongst these contacts, 34 individuals progressed to microbiologically confirmed TB disease and were included as progressors, and 115 nonprogressors were included as controls. Prognostic performance of the TRM5 signature in the ACS training set was excellent within 6 months of TB diagnosis (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC] 0.96 [95% confidence interval, 0.93–0.99]) and 6–12 months (AUC 0.76 [0.65–0.87]) before TB diagnosis. TRM5 validated with an AUC of 0.66 (0.56–0.75) within 1 year of TB diagnosis in the Gambian validation cohort. The 3PR signature yielded an AUC of 0.89 (0.84–0.95) within 6 months of TB diagnosis and 0.72 (0.64–0.81) 7–12 months before TB diagnosis in the entire South African discovery cohort and validated with an AUC of 0.65 (0.55–0.75) within 1 year of TB diagnosis in the Gambian validation cohort. Signature validation may have been limited by a systematic shift in signal magnitudes generated by differences between the validation assay when compared to the discovery assay. Further validation, especially in cohorts from non-African countries, is necessary to determine how generalizable signature performance is. CONCLUSIONS: Both proteomic TB risk signatures predicted progression to incident TB within a year of diagnosis. To our knowledge, these are the first validated prognostic proteomic signatures. Neither meet the minimum criteria as defined in the WHO Target Product Profile for a progression test. More work is required to develop such a test for practical identification of individuals for investigation of incipient, subclinical, or active TB disease for appropriate treatment and care. Public Library of Science 2019-04-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6467365/ /pubmed/30990820 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002781 Text en © 2019 Penn-Nicholson 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Penn-Nicholson, Adam
Hraha, Thomas
Thompson, Ethan G.
Sterling, David
Mbandi, Stanley Kimbung
Wall, Kirsten M.
Fisher, Michelle
Suliman, Sara
Shankar, Smitha
Hanekom, Willem A.
Janjic, Nebojsa
Hatherill, Mark
Kaufmann, Stefan H. E.
Sutherland, Jayne
Walzl, Gerhard
De Groote, Mary Ann
Ochsner, Urs
Zak, Daniel E.
Scriba, Thomas J.
Discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: A prospective cohort study
title Discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: A prospective cohort study
title_full Discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: A prospective cohort study
title_fullStr Discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: A prospective cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: A prospective cohort study
title_short Discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: A prospective cohort study
title_sort discovery and validation of a prognostic proteomic signature for tuberculosis progression: a prospective cohort study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6467365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30990820
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002781
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