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Borderline QuantiFERON results and the distinction between specific responses and test variability

Authors :
Jonathan W. Uzorka
Sandra M. Arend
Willeke P. J. Franken
Ailko W. J. Bossink
Alida C. van Haeften
Eliane M. S. Leyten
Peter Boonstra
Tom H. M. Ottenhoff
Gert Doornenbal
Steven Thijsen
Source :
Tuberculosis, 111, 102-108
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

QuantiFERON (QFT) results near the cut-off are subject to debate. We aimed to investigate which borderline QFT results were due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)-specific responses or to test variability.In a contact investigation, tuberculin skin test (TST), QFT and T-SPOT.TB (T-SPOT) were performed in 785 BCG-unvaccinated contacts. Contacts with a low-negative (0.15), borderline (0.15-0.35), low-positive (0.35-0.70) or high-positive QFT (≥0.70 IU/mL) were compared with respect to exposure, TST and T-SPOT results. Development of active tuberculosis was assessed.Borderline QFT results occurred in threefold excess over test variability (p = 0.0027). In contacts with low-negative, borderline or positive QFT results, a positive TST occurred in 24.9%, 62.1% and 91.4% (p 0.0001) and a positive T-SPOT result in 6.3%, 41.3% and 86.4%, respectively (p 0.0001). Two-third (20/29) of contacts with a borderline and 14/16 (88%) with a low-positive QFT had a positive TST and/or T-SPOT, indicating probable Mtb-infection. During 12 years of follow-up, seven patients were diagnosed with active tuberculosis, two of whom after a low-positive QFT.In this study, most borderline and low-positive QFT results were Mtb-specific, showing the biological significance of a borderline QFT. The clinical relevance, however, will be most distinct in patients who are or will be immunocompromised.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tuberculosis, 111, 102-108
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....49d89064a884b9c26d5c966a3ccf3933