University of Leicester
Browse

Discovery and validation of a personalised risk predictor for incident tuberculosis in low transmission settings

Download (2.2 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-09-17, 13:54 authored by Pranabashis Haldar, Claire J. Calderwood, Alexei YavlinskyAlexei Yavlinsky, Maria Krutikov, Matteo QuartagnoMatteo Quartagno, Maximilian C. Aichelburg, Neus Altet, Roland Diel, Claudia C. Dobler, Jose Domínguez, Joseph S. Doyle, Connie Erkens, Steffen Geis, Anja M. Hauri, Thomas Hermansen, James C. Johnston, Christoph Lange, Berit Lange, Frank van LethFrank van Leth, Laura Muñoz, Christine Roder, Kamila Romanowski, David Roth, Martina Sester, Rosa Sloot, Giovanni Sotgiu, Gerrit Woltmann, Takashi Yoshiyama, Jean-Pierre Zellweger, Dominik ZennerDominik Zenner, Robert W. Aldridge, Andrew CopasAndrew Copas, Molebogeng X. Rangaka, Marc LipmanMarc Lipman, Mahdad NoursadeghiMahdad Noursadeghi, Ibrahim AbubakarIbrahim Abubakar
The risk of tuberculosis (TB) is variable among individuals with latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection (LTBI), but validated estimates of personalized risk are lacking. In pooled data from 18 systematically identified cohort studies from 20 countries, including 80,468 individuals tested for LTBI, 5-year cumulative incident TB risk among people with untreated LTBI was 15.6% (95% confidence interval (CI), 8.0–29.2%) among child contacts, 4.8% (95% CI, 3.0–7.7%) among adult contacts, 5.0% (95% CI, 1.6–14.5%) among migrants and 4.8% (95% CI, 1.5–14.3%) among immunocompromised groups. We confirmed highly variable estimates within risk groups, necessitating an individualized approach to risk stratification. Therefore, we developed a personalized risk predictor for incident TB (PERISKOPE-TB) that combines a quantitative measure of T cell sensitization and clinical covariates. Internal–external cross-validation of the model demonstrated a random effects meta-analysis C-statistic of 0.88 (95% CI, 0.82–0.93) for incident TB. In decision curve analysis, the model demonstrated clinical utility for targeting preventative treatment, compared to treating all, or no, people with LTBI. We challenge the current crude approach to TB risk estimation among people with LTBI in favor of our evidence-based and patient-centered method, in settings aiming for pre-elimination worldwide.

History

Citation

Nature Medicine, volume 26, pages 1941–1949 (2020)

Author affiliation

Respiratory Biomedical Research Centre, Institute for Lung Health, Department of Respiratory 54 Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Nature Medicine

Volume

26

Pagination

1941-1949

Publisher

Nature Research

issn

1078-8956

Acceptance date

2020-08-26

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-04-19

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC