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Ann Thorac Med. 2012 Oct-Dec; 7(4): 220–225.
PMCID: PMC3506102
Diagnostic value of ex vivo pleural fluid interferon-gamma versus adapted whole-blood quantiferon-TB gold in tube assays in tuberculous pleural effusion
Eman N. Eldin, Asmaa Omar, Mahmoud Khairy,1 Adel H. M. Mekawy,2 and Maha K. Ghanem3
Department of Clinical Pathology, Assiut University Hospital, Egypt
1Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Assiut University Hospital, Egypt
2Department of DInternal Medicine, Assiut University Hospital, Egypt
3Department of Chest, Assiut University Hospital, Egypt
Address for correspondence: Dr. Maha K. Ghanem, Professor of Chest Diseases and Tuberculosis, Department of Chest, Assiut University Hospital, Assiut, 71111, Egypt. E-mail: mahaghanem/at/hotmail.com
Received March 16, 2012; Accepted May 27, 2012.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Noninvasive diagnosis of pleural tuberculosis (TB) remains a challenge due to the paucibacillary nature of the disease. As Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB)-specific T cells are recruited into pleural space in TB effusion; their indirect detection may provide useful clinical information.
OBJECTIVES:
Evaluation of pleural fluid interferon (INF)-γ levels vs Quantiferon–TB Gold In tube assay (QFT- IT) in blood and its adapted variants, using pleural fluid or isolated pleural fluid cells in the diagnosis of pleural TB.
METHODS:
Thirty-eight patients with pleural effusion of unknown etiology presented at Assiut University Hospital, Egypt, were recruited. Blood and pleural fluid were collected at presentation for INF-γ assays. Ex vivo pleural fluid INF-γ levels, QFT-IT in blood and its adapted variants were compared with final diagnosis as confirmed by other tools including blind and/or thoracoscopic pleural biopsy.
RESULTS:
The final clinical diagnosis was TB in 20 (53%), malignancy in 10 (26%), and effusion due to other causes in eight patients (21%). Ex vivo pleural fluid INF-γ levels accurately identified TB in all patients and were superior to the QFT-IT assays using blood or pleural fluid (70 and 78% sensitivity, with 60 and 83% specificity, respectively). QFT-IT assay applied to isolated pleural fluid cells had 100% sensitivity and 72% specificity. The optimal cut-off obtained with ROC analysis was 0.73 for TB Gold assay in blood assay, 0.82 IU/ml for the cultured pleural fluid assay, and 0.94 for isolated pleural cells assay.
CONCLUSION:
The ex vivo pleural fluid INF-γ level is an accurate marker for the diagnosis of pleural TB. QFT- IT assay in peripheral blood or its adapted versions of the assay using pleural fluid and/or washed pleural fluid cells had no diagnostic advantage over pleural fluid INF-γ in the diagnosis of pleural TB.
Keywords: Diagnosis, interferon-γ, interferon-γ release assays, quantiferon–TB gold in tube assay, tuberculous effusion
Articles from Annals of Thoracic Medicine are provided here courtesy of
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