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IP-10 Kinetics in the First Week of Therapy are Strongly Associated with Bacteriological Confirmation of Tuberculosis Diagnosis in HIV-Infected Patients.

  • Alberto L. García-Basteiro
  • , Edson Mambuque
  • , Alice Den Hertog
  • , Belén Saavedra
  • , Inocencia Cuamba
  • , Laura Oliveras
  • , Silvia Blanco
  • , Helder Bulo
  • , Joe Brew
  • , Luis Cuevas
  • , Frank Cobelens
  • , Augusto Nhabomba
  • , Richard Anthony
  • Centro de investigação de Saúde de Manhiça
  • University of Barcelona
  • Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development
  • Utrecht University of Applied Sciences
  • National Institute of Public Health and the Environment

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Simple effective tools to monitor the long treatment of tuberculosis (TB) are lacking. Easily measured host derived biomarkers have been identified but need to be validated in larger studies and different population groups. Here we investigate the early response in IP-10 levels (between day 0 and day 7 of TB therapy) to identify bacteriological status at diagnosis among 127 HIV-infected patients starting TB treatment. All participants were then classified as responding or not responding to treatment blindly using a previously described IP-10 kinetic algorithm. There were 77 bacteriologically confirmed cases and 41 Xpert MTB/RIF® and culture negative cases. Most participants had a measurable decline in IP-10 during the first 7 days of therapy. Bacteriologically confirmed cases were more likely to have high IP-10 levels at D0 and had a steeper decline than clinically diagnosed cases (mean decline difference 2231 pg/dl, 95% CI: 897-3566, p = 0.0013). Bacteriologically confirmed cases were more likely to have a measurable decline in IP-10 at day 7 than clinically diagnosed cases (48/77 (62.3%) vs 13/41 (31.7%), p < 0.001). This study confirms the association between a decrease in IP-10 levels during the first week of treatment and a bacteriological confirmation at diagnosis in a large cohort of HIV positive patients.

Original languageEnglish
Article number14302
Pages (from-to)14302
JournalScientific Reports
Volume7
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Oct 2017

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

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