We aimed to evaluate the antibody in lymphocyte supernatant (ALS) assay as a biomarker to diagnose tuberculosis among adults from Tanzania with and without HIV.
Adults admitted with suspicion for ...tuberculosis had sputa obtained for GeneXpert MTB/RIF, acid-fast bacilli smear and mycobacterial culture; blood was obtained prior to treatment initiation and after 4 weeks. Adults hospitalized with non-infectious conditions served as controls. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were cultured unstimulated for 72 hours. Anti-mycobacterial antibodies were measured from culture supernatants by ELISA, using BCG vaccine as the coating antigen. Median ALS responses were compared between cases and controls at baseline and between cases over time.
Of 97 TB cases, 85 were microbiologically confirmed and 12 were clinically diagnosed. Median ALS responses from TB cases (0.366 OD from confirmed cases and 0.285 from clinical cases) were higher compared to controls (0.085, p<0.001). ALS responses did not differ based on HIV status, CD4 count or sputum smear status. Over time, the median ALS values declined significantly (0.357 at baseline; 0.198 after 4-weeks, p<0.001).
Robust ALS responses were mounted by patients with TB regardless of HIV status, CD4 count, or low sputum bacillary burden, potentially conferring a unique niche for this immunologic biomarker for TB.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an emerging public health problem and methods for surveillance are needed. We designed 85 sequence-specific PCR reactions to detect 79 genes or mutations associated ...with resistance across 10 major antimicrobial classes, with a focus on E. coli. The 85 qPCR assays demonstrated >99.9% concordance with sequencing. We evaluated the correlation between genotypic resistance markers and phenotypic susceptibility results on 239 E. coli isolates. Both sensitivity and specificity exceeded 90% for ampicillin, ceftriaxone, cefepime, imipenem, ciprofloxacin, azithromycin, gentamicin, amikacin, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, tetracycline, and chloramphenicol phenotypic susceptibility results. We then evaluated the assays on direct stool specimens and observed a sensitivity of 97% ± 5 but, as expected, a lower specificity of 75% ± 31 versus the genotype of the E. coli cultured from stool. Finally, the assays were incorporated into a convenient TaqMan Array Card (TAC) format. These assays may be useful for tracking AMR in E. coli isolates or directly in stool for targeted testing of the fecal antibiotic resistome.
Early childhood enteric infection with Shigella/EIEC, enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC), Campylobacter, and Giardia has been associated with reduced child growth, yet a recent randomized trial of ...antimicrobial therapy to reduce these infections did not improve growth outcomes. To interrogate this discrepancy, we measured the enteric infections from this study. We leveraged the Early Life Interventions for Childhood Growth and Development in Tanzania (ELICIT) trial, a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial of antimicrobial therapy with azithromycin and nitazoxanide provided quarterly to infants from 6 to 15 months of age. We tested 5,479 stool samples at time points across the study for 34 enteropathogens using quantitative PCR. There was substantial carriage of enteropathogens in stool. Azithromycin administration led to reductions in Campylobacter jejuni/coli, enteroaggregative E. coli, and Shigella/EIEC (absolute risk difference ranged from -0.06 to 0.24) 2 weeks after treatment however there was no effect after 3 months. There was no difference in Giardia after nitazoxanide administration (ARR 0.03 at the 12 month administration). When examining the effect of azithromycin versus placebo on the subset of children infected with specific pathogens at the time of treatment, a small increase in weight-for-age Z score was seen only in those infected with Campylobacter jejuni/coli (0.10 Z score, 95% CI -0.01-0.20; length-for-age Z score 0.07, 95% CI -0.06-0.20). The antimicrobial intervention of quarterly azithromycin plus or minus nitazoxanide led to only transient decreases in enteric infections with Shigella/EIEC, enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC), Campylobacter, and Giardia. There was a trend towards improved growth in children infected with Campylobacter that received quarterly azithromycin.
Summary Background Childhood diarrhoea can be caused by many pathogens that are difficult to assay in the laboratory. Molecular diagnostic techniques provide a uniform method to detect and quantify ...candidate enteropathogens. We aimed to develop and assess molecular tests for identification of enteropathogens and their association with disease. Methods We developed and assessed molecular diagnostic tests for 15 enteropathogens across three platforms—PCR-Luminex, multiplex real-time PCR, and TaqMan array card—at five laboratories worldwide. We judged the analytical and clinical performance of these molecular techniques against comparator methods (bacterial culture, ELISA, and PCR) using 867 diarrhoeal and 619 non-diarrhoeal stool specimens. We also measured molecular quantities of pathogens to predict the association with diarrhoea, by univariate logistic regression analysis. Findings The molecular tests showed very good analytical and clinical performance at all five laboratories. Comparator methods had limited sensitivity compared with the molecular techniques (20–85% depending on the target) but good specificity (median 97·3%, IQR 96·5–98·9; mean 95·2%, SD 9·1). Positive samples by comparator methods usually had higher molecular quantities of pathogens than did negative samples, across almost all platforms and for most pathogens (p<0·05). The odds ratio for diarrhoea at a given quantity (measured by quantification cycle, Cq) showed that for most pathogens associated with diarrhoea—including Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli, Cryptosporidium spp, enteropathogenic Escherichia coli , heat-stable enterotoxigenic E coli , rotavirus, Shigella spp and enteroinvasive E coli , and Vibrio cholerae —the strength of association with diarrhoea increased at higher pathogen loads. For example, Shigella spp at a Cq range of 15–20 had an odds ratio of 8·0 (p<0·0001), but at a Cq range of 25–30 the odds ratio fell to 1·7 (p=0·043). Interpretation Molecular diagnostic tests can be implemented successfully and with fidelity across laboratories around the world. In the case of diarrhoea, these techniques can detect pathogens with high sensitivity and ascribe diarrhoeal associations based on quantification, including in mixed infections, providing rich and unprecedented measurements of infectious causes. Funding Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Next Generation Molecular Diagnostics Project.
Background. No data are available on the etiology of diarrhea requiring hospitalization after rotavirus vaccine introduction in Africa. The monovalent rotavirus vaccine was introduced in Tanzania on ...1 January 2013. We performed a vaccine impact and effectiveness study as well as a quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR)-based etiology study at a rural Tanzanian hospital. Methods. We obtained data on admissions among children <5 years to Haydom Lutheran Hospital between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2015 and estimated the impact of vaccine introduction on all-cause diarrhea admissions. We then performed a vaccine effectiveness study using the test-negative design. Finally, we tested diarrheal specimens during 2015 by qPCR for a broad range of enteropathogens and calculated pathogen-specific attributable fractions (AFs). Results. Vaccine introduction was associated with a 44.9% (95% confidence interval CI, 17.6%-97.4%) reduction in diarrhea admissions in 2015, as well as delay of the rotavirus season. The effectiveness of 2 doses of vaccine was 74.8% (95% CI, −8.2% to 94.1%) using an enzyme immunoassay-based case definition and 85.1% (95% CI, 26.5%–97.0%) using a qPCR-based case definition. Among 146 children enrolled in 2015, rotavirus remained the leading etiology of diarrhea requiring hospitalization (AF, 25.8% 95% CI, 24.4%–26.7%), followed by heat-stable enterotoxin-producing Escherichia coli (AF, 18.4% 95% CI, 12.9%–21.9%), Shigella/enteroinvasive E. coli (AF, 14.5% 95% CI, 10.2%–22.8%), and Cryptosporidium (AF, 7.9% 95% CI, 6.2%–9.3%). Conclusions. Despite the clear impact of vaccine introduction in this setting, rotavirus remained the leading etiology of diarrhea requiring hospitalization. Further efforts to maximize vaccine coverage and improve vaccine performance in these settings are warranted.
Early childhood enteric infection with Shigella/EIEC, enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC), Campylobacter, and Giardia has been associated with reduced child growth, yet a recent randomized trial of ...antimicrobial therapy to reduce these infections did not improve growth outcomes. To interrogate this discrepancy, we measured the enteric infections from this study.
We leveraged the Early Life Interventions for Childhood Growth and Development in Tanzania (ELICIT) trial, a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial of antimicrobial therapy with azithromycin and nitazoxanide provided quarterly to infants from 6 to 15 months of age. We tested 5,479 stool samples at time points across the study for 34 enteropathogens using quantitative PCR.
There was substantial carriage of enteropathogens in stool. Azithromycin administration led to reductions in Campylobacter jejuni/coli, enteroaggregative E. coli, and Shigella/EIEC (absolute risk difference ranged from -0.06 to 0.24) 2 weeks after treatment however there was no effect after 3 months. There was no difference in Giardia after nitazoxanide administration (ARR 0.03 at the 12 month administration). When examining the effect of azithromycin versus placebo on the subset of children infected with specific pathogens at the time of treatment, a small increase in weight-for-age Z score was seen only in those infected with Campylobacter jejuni/coli (0.10 Z score, 95% CI -0.01-0.20; length-for-age Z score 0.07, 95% CI -0.06-0.20).
The antimicrobial intervention of quarterly azithromycin plus or minus nitazoxanide led to only transient decreases in enteric infections with Shigella/EIEC, enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC), Campylobacter, and Giardia. There was a trend towards improved growth in children infected with Campylobacter that received quarterly azithromycin.
Acute febrile illness (AFI) is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality worldwide, yet an etiologic agent is often not identified. Convalescent-phase serology is impractical, blood culture ...is slow, and many pathogens are fastidious or impossible to cultivate. We developed a real-time PCR-based TaqMan array card (TAC) that can test six to eight samples within 2.5 h from sample to results and can simultaneously detect 26 AFI-associated organisms, including 15 viruses (chikungunya, Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever CCHF virus, dengue, Ebola virus, Bundibugyo virus, Sudan virus, hantaviruses Hantaan and Seoul, hepatitis E, Marburg, Nipah virus, o'nyong-nyong virus, Rift Valley fever virus, West Nile virus, and yellow fever virus), 8 bacteria (Bartonella spp., Brucella spp., Coxiella burnetii, Leptospira spp., Rickettsia spp., Salmonella enterica and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, and Yersinia pestis), and 3 protozoa (Leishmania spp., Plasmodium spp., and Trypanosoma brucei). Two extrinsic controls (phocine herpesvirus 1 and bacteriophage MS2) were included to ensure extraction and amplification efficiency. Analytical validation was performed on spiked specimens for linearity, intra-assay precision, interassay precision, limit of detection, and specificity. The performance of the card on clinical specimens was evaluated with 1,050 blood samples by comparison to the individual real-time PCR assays, and the TAC exhibited an overall 88% (278/315; 95% confidence interval CI, 84% to 92%) sensitivity and a 99% (5,261/5,326, 98% to 99%) specificity. This TaqMan array card can be used in field settings as a rapid screen for outbreak investigation or for the surveillance of pathogens, including Ebola virus.
Rifampin-resistant and/or multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (RR/MDR-TB) treatment requires multiple drugs, and outcomes remain suboptimal. Some drugs are associated with improved outcome. It is ...unknown whether particular pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic relationships predict outcome.
Adults with pulmonary RR/MDR-TB in Tanzania, Bangladesh, and the Russian Federation receiving local regimens were enrolled from June 2016 to July 2018. Serum was collected after 2, 4, and 8 weeks for each drug's area under the concentration-time curve over 24 hours (AUC0-24). Quantitative susceptibility of the M. tuberculosis isolate was measured by minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs). Individual drug AUC0-24/MIC targets were assessed by adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for favorable treatment outcome, and hazard ratios (HRs) for time to sputum culture conversion. K-means clustering algorithm separated the cohort of the most common multidrug regimen into 4 clusters by AUC0-24/MIC exposures.
Among 290 patients, 62 (21%) experienced treatment failure, including 30 deaths. Moxifloxacin AUC0-24/MIC target of 58 was associated with favorable treatment outcome (OR, 3.75; 95% confidence interval, 1.21-11.56; P = .022); levofloxacin AUC0-24/MIC of 118.3, clofazimine AUC0-24/MIC of 50.5, and pyrazinamide AUC0-24 of 379 mg × h/L were associated with faster culture conversion (HR >1.0, P < .05). Other individual drug exposures were not predictive. Clustering by AUC0-24/MIC revealed that those with the lowest multidrug exposures had the slowest culture conversion.
Amidst multidrug regimens for RR/MDR-TB, serum pharmacokinetics and M. tuberculosis MICs were variable, yet defined parameters to certain drugs-fluoroquinolones, pyrazinamide, clofazimine-were predictive and should be optimized to improve clinical outcome.
NCT03559582.
•Children living in these settings had a high prevalence of enteropathogens, high levels of intestinal inflammation, abnormal intestinal permeability, high markers of systemic inflammation, and ...postnatal acquired linear growth deficits when compared to children living in the US or Europe•This study contributes empiric evidence to demonstrate that enteric infection alters both fecal markers of inflammation and permeability•Current markers of enteropathy fail to account for a large portion of the observed shortfalls in linear growth in these populations, and markers of systemic inflammation appear as the most promising predictive biomarkers for identifying linear growth failure in children
Environmental enteropathy (EE) is hypothesized as a mediator of growth faltering, but few prospective studies have evaluated pathways linking enteropathogen exposure, intestinal inflammation and permeability, and growth. The MAL-ED study represents a novel analytical framework and explicitly evaluates multiple putative EE pathways in combination and using an unprecedented quantity of data. Despite evidence that gut inflammation and altered gut permeability are frequently present and that associations between enteropathogen exposure and gut dysfunction exist, the observed attributable effects of EE on growth faltering in young children were small.
Environmental enteropathy (EE), the adverse impact of frequent and numerous enteric infections on the gut resulting in a state of persistent immune activation and altered permeability, has been proposed as a key determinant of growth failure in children in low- and middle-income populations. A theory-driven systems model to critically evaluate pathways through which enteropathogens, gut permeability, and intestinal and systemic inflammation affect child growth was conducted within the framework of the Etiology, Risk Factors and Interactions of Enteric Infections and Malnutrition and the Consequences for Child Health and Development (MAL-ED) birth cohort study that included children from eight countries.
Non-diarrheal stool samples (N=22,846) from 1253 children from multiple sites were evaluated for a panel of 40 enteropathogens and fecal concentrations of myeloperoxidase, alpha-1-antitrypsin, and neopterin. Among these same children, urinary lactulose:mannitol (L:M) (N=6363) and plasma alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) (N=2797) were also measured. The temporal sampling design was used to create a directed acyclic graph of proposed mechanistic pathways between enteropathogen detection in non-diarrheal stools, biomarkers of intestinal permeability and inflammation, systemic inflammation and change in length- and weight- for age in children 0–2years of age.
Children in these populations had frequent enteric infections and high levels of both intestinal and systemic inflammation. Higher burdens of enteropathogens, especially those categorized as being enteroinvasive or causing mucosal disruption, were associated with elevated biomarker concentrations of gut and systemic inflammation and, via these associations, indirectly associated with both reduced linear and ponderal growth. Evidence for the association with reduced linear growth was stronger for systemic inflammation than for gut inflammation; the opposite was true of reduced ponderal growth. Although Giardia was associated with reduced growth, the association was not mediated by any of the biomarkers evaluated.
The large quantity of empirical evidence contributing to this analysis supports the conceptual model of EE. The effects of EE on growth faltering in young children were small, but multiple mechanistic pathways underlying the attribution of growth failure to asymptomatic enteric infections had statistical support in the analysis. The strongest evidence for EE was the association between enteropathogens and linear growth mediated through systemic inflammation.
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Enteropathy is prevalent in tuberculosis-endemic areas, and it has been shown to impair intestinal absorptive function; therefore, enteropathogen burden might negatively affect antimycobacterial ...pharmacokinetics, particularly among malnourished children. We sought to quantify enteropathogen burden among children initiating tuberculosis treatment in rural Tanzania and determine the effect of enteropathogen burden on serum antimycobacterial pharmacokinetics.
We performed a prospective cohort study at one site in rural Tanzania as an exploratory substudy of a large multicountry cohort study. We included children younger than 15 years of age with confirmed or probable tuberculosis undergoing treatment with first-line tuberculosis therapy; children were excluded from the study if they were unable to undergo sample collection. Participants were consecutively recruited from the inpatient paediatric wards or the outpatient tuberculosis clinic at Haydom Lutheran Hospital, Tanzania. The main outcome was to quantify symptomatic enteropathogen burden and the effect on serum antimycobacterial pharmacokinetics. We quantified enteropathogen burden (defined as the sum of distinct enteropathogens detected in stool) using a multipathogen PCR capable of simultaneous detection of 37 bacterial, viral, and parasitic species or species groups from stool collected within 72 h of treatment initiation. Comprehensive clinical assessment, including presence of gastrointestinal symptoms, was performed at baseline, and serum was collected approximately 2 weeks after treatment initiation at steady state and throughout the dosing interval with concentrations of isoniazid, rifampicin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol measured by liquid chromatography with a tandem mass spectrometry assay to quantify peak (Cmax) and total area under the concentration curve (AUC0–24), as determined by non-compartmental analysis. Enteropathogen burden was compared with pharmacokinetic measurements using bivariable and multivariable linear regression.
58 children were assessed for eligibilty and enrolled between June 25, 2016, and Feb 6, 2018; 44 had complete stool testing and serum pharmacokinetic data, and they were included in the analyses. 20 (45%) were female, and 24 (55%) were male. 37 (84%) had moderate or severe malnutrition. A mean of 2·1 (SD 1·3) enteropathogens were detected per participant. Target peak concentrations of rifampicin were reached in eight (18%) of 44 participants, isoniazid in 24 (54%) of 44 participants, pyrazinamide in 28 (74%) of 38 participants, and ethambutol in six (15%) of 39 participants. Compared with controlled comparisons, each summative additional bacterial enteropathogen detected was associated with a 40% lower rifampicin Cmax (95% CI −62 to −5) and a 36% lower ethambutol Cmax (−52 to −14), while viral pathogens were associated with a 51% lower isoniazid Cmax (−75 to −7). The combination of gastrointestinal symptoms and detection of an additional enteropathogen was associated with a 27% reduction in rifampicin AUC0–24 (95% CI −47 to −1).
Tanzanian children undergoing tuberculosis treatment rarely attained pharmacokinetic targets; enteropathogen carriage was common and enteropathogen burden was associated with significant reductions in the concentrations of some antimycobacterial drugs. Further research should explore mechanistic relationships of individual pathogens and antimycobacterial pharmacokinetics in larger cohorts, or determine if screening for and treating enteropathogens at tuberculosis treatment initiation improves pharmacokinetic target attainment.
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health.
For the Swahili translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.