AI Article Synopsis

  • Lipoarabinomannan (LAM) is being studied as a potential biomarker for diagnosing pleural tuberculosis (TB) due to limitations in current diagnostic tests.
  • In a study with 170 subjects, the LAM antigen test showed good specificity but lower sensitivity and positive predictive value for diagnosing pleural TB compared to established reference standards.
  • While pleural LAM-LFA testing can effectively rule out TB when negative, it is not reliable enough for direct diagnosis, though its effectiveness improves in patients with elevated ADA levels.

Article Abstract

Background: Lipoarabinomannan (LAM) antigen serves as an attractive biomarker to diagnose Tuberculosis (TB). Given the limitations of current diagnostic modalities for Pleural TB, current study evaluated LAM's potential to serve as a point-of-care test to diagnose pleural TB.

Methods: A cross sectional, diagnostic accuracy study was conducted during February to November 2021 in a tertiary care hospital in India. LAM antigen detection was performed on pleural fluid as well as early morning urine specimen of suspected pleural TB patients by "Alere/ Abott Determine TB LAM" lateral flow assay (LAM-LFA). The results were compared to microbiological reference standards/MRS (Mycobacterial culture or NAAT) and Composite reference standards/CRS (MRS plus Clinico-radiological diagnosis).

Results: A total of 170 subjects were included in the analysis, including 26 with Definite TB, 22 with Probable TB, and 122 with No TB. Compared to MRS and CRS, the sensitivity (61.54% & 45.83%) and positive predictive value (PPV) (57.14 & 78.57%) of Pleural LAM-LFA testing were found to be suboptimal, whereas the specificity (91.67% & 95.08%) and negative predictive value (NPV) (92.96% & 81.69%) of the assay were found to be good. Urinary LAM-LFA performed even worse than pleural LAM-LFA, except for its higher specificity against MRS and CRS (97.2% and 98.3%, respectively). Specificity and PPV of pleural LAM detection increased to 100% when analysed in a subgroup of patients with elevated ADA levels (receiver operating curve analysis-derived cut off value > 40 IU/ml).

Conclusion: Detection of LAM antigen by LFA directly from pleural fluid was found to be a useful test to predict absence of the disease if the test is negative rather than using as a POCT for diagnosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10858539PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12879-024-09088-4DOI Listing

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