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Nested-PCR using MPB64 fragment improves the diagnosis of pleural and meningeal tuberculosis

Nested-PCR usando o fragmento MPB64 melhora o diagnóstico da tuberculose pleural e meníngea

Abstracts

Fluids in which Mycobacterium tuberculosis are seldom found, such as pleural and cerebrospinal liquids, are good candidates to be studied using PCR techniques. We detail our experience with a PCR assay applied to pleural and cerebrospinal fluids using the primer MPB64. Seventy three specimens were analyzed: 30 pleural fluids (PF), 26 pleural biopsies (PB) and 17 cerebrospinal fluids (CSF). The gold standard for the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis was the positive culture for M. tuberculosis in CSF. Tuberculous pleural effusion was diagnosed when cultures of PF and/or PB were positive for M. tuberculosis, or the PB histology showed granulomas. Our results, compared to the gold standards employed, showed a sensitivity of 70%, specificity of 88%, positive predictive value of 82% and negative predictive value of 80%. The high specificity of the MPB64 fragment while still retaining a good sensitivity makes it very well suited for pleural and cerebrospinal tuberculosis diagnosis.

Tuberculosis; Diagnosis; PCR technique; Central nervous system; Pleura


O Mycobacterium tuberculosis é raramente encontrado em fluidos como o líquido pleural e o cérebroespinhal, tornando estas localizações de difícil diagnóstico. Apresentamos nossa experiência com uma técnica de PCR aplicada a líquido pleural e cerebroespinhal com o uso do primer MPB64. Sessenta e três espécimes foram analisados: 30 líquidos pleurais (PF), 26 biópsias pleurais (PB) e 17 líquidos cerebroespinhais (CSF). O gold standard para o diagnóstico de meningite tuberculosa foi a cultura positiva para M. tuberculosis no CSF. Tuberculose pleural era diagnosticada quando culturas do PF e/ou PB eram positivas para M. tuberculosis, ou a histologia da PB mostrava granulomas. Nossos resultados, comparados aos gold standards empregados, mostram sensitividade de 70%, especificidade de 88%, valor preditivo positivo de 82% e valor preditivo negativo de 80%. A elevada especificidade e boa sensibilidade do fragmento MPB64 o transformam em um bom parâmetro para o diagnóstico de tuberculose pleural e do líquido cérebroespinhal.

Tuberculose; Diagnóstico; Técnica de PCR; Sistema nervoso central; Pleura


ARTIGO

Nested-PCR using MPB64 fragment improves the diagnosis of pleural and meningeal tuberculosis

Nested-PCR usando o fragmento MPB64 melhora o diagnóstico da tuberculose pleural e meníngea

Luiz C. Martins1 1 . Medical School, Marilia, SP, Brazil. , Ilma A. Paschoal2 2 . Pulmonary Disease Department, Universidade de Campinas, Campinas, SP, Brazil. , Angela Von Nowakonski3 3 . Department of Clinical Pathology, UNICAMP, Campinas, SP, Brazil. , Silvana A.B. Silva4 4 . Hematology, UNICAMP, Campinas, SP, Brazil. , Fernando F. Costa4 4 . Hematology, UNICAMP, Campinas, SP, Brazil. and Laura Sterian Ward5 5 . Internal Medicine, UNICAMP and Laboratory of Cancer Molecular Genetics-FCM/UNICAMP, Campinas, SP, Brazil. Address to: Dra Laura Sterian Ward. GEMOCA/Med Int/Clin Med/FCM/UNICAMP, Cidade Universitária Zeferino Vaz, 13083-970 Campinas, São Paulo State, Brazil. Telefax: 55 19 289-4107. e-mail: ward@unicamp.br /Recebido para publicação em 16/7/99.

ABSTRACT: Fluids in which Mycobacterium tuberculosis are seldom found, such as pleural and cerebrospinal liquids, are good candidates to be studied using PCR techniques. We detail our experience with a PCR assay applied to pleural and cerebrospinal fluids using the primer MPB64. Seventy three specimens were analyzed: 30 pleural fluids (PF), 26 pleural biopsies (PB) and 17 cerebrospinal fluids (CSF). The gold standard for the diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis was the positive culture for M. tuberculosis in CSF. Tuberculous pleural effusion was diagnosed when cultures of PF and/or PB were positive for M. tuberculosis, or the PB histology showed granulomas. Our results, compared to the gold standards employed, showed a sensitivity of 70%, specificity of 88%, positive predictive value of 82% and negative predictive value of 80%. The high specificity of the MPB64 fragment while still retaining a good sensitivity makes it very well suited for pleural and cerebrospinal tuberculosis diagnosis.

Key-words: Tuberculosis. Diagnosis. PCR technique. Central nervous system. Pleura.

RESUMO: O Mycobacterium tuberculosis é raramente encontrado em fluidos como o líquido pleural e o cérebroespinhal, tornando estas localizações de difícil diagnóstico. Apresentamos nossa experiência com uma técnica de PCR aplicada a líquido pleural e cerebroespinhal com o uso do primer MPB64. Sessenta e três espécimes foram analisados: 30 líquidos pleurais (PF), 26 biópsias pleurais (PB) e 17 líquidos cerebroespinhais (CSF). O gold standard para o diagnóstico de meningite tuberculosa foi a cultura positiva para M. tuberculosis no CSF. Tuberculose pleural era diagnosticada quando culturas do PF e/ou PB eram positivas para M. tuberculosis, ou a histologia da PB mostrava granulomas. Nossos resultados, comparados aos gold standards empregados, mostram sensitividade de 70%, especificidade de 88%, valor preditivo positivo de 82% e valor preditivo negativo de 80%. A elevada especificidade e boa sensibilidade do fragmento MPB64 o transformam em um bom parâmetro para o diagnóstico de tuberculose pleural e do líquido cérebroespinhal.

Palavras-chaves: Tuberculose. Diagnóstico. Técnica de PCR. Sistema nervoso central. Pleura.

Tuberculosis continues to be a serious health problem in Brazil and, likewise in other countries, the number of cases is increasing in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection6. Pleural and central nervous system tuberculosis are frequently suspected in these patients and we often have to deal with these challenging diagnoses in our service. Laboratory methods play a crucial role in establishing the diagnosis and monitoring the therapy. In order to establish a conclusive diagnosis of tuberculosis it is necessary to demonstrate the presence of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis in body fluids or tissues. Microscopy for acid-fast bacilli is, at present, the mainstay of routine clinical laboratories for any rapid diagnostic approach to a patient under clinical suspicion of tuberculosis. However, the technique has low sensitivity and cannot identify the Mycobacterium species7. Traditional culture methods with identification of the causative Mycobacterium continue to be considered definitive in terms of diagnosis. However, these techniques are laborious and may take as long as 12 weeks to yield results3 7. Besides, the sensitivity of the culture can be as low as 50% or less3 7. Radiometric culture systems may improve the sensitivity and are faster but they still require at least 2 weeks to confirm the diagnosis and are expensive11. With the development of new techniques, such as the detection of microorganisms by hybridization with probes, introduced in the 1970s, and immunological procedures, limitations in the sensitivity and/or specificity of established techniques have become apparent13. Hence, molecular amplification technology emerged as the most revolutionary development to reach clinical and virology laboratories this decade. The advent of nucleic acid probe methods, more than a decade ago, was welcomed as a way to speed up the identification problem. However, it soon became clear that a more sensitive detection method amplifying the targets when only very few specimens were present was needed2. PCR-based amplification methods allow the search for organism-specific nucleic acid sequences regardless of the physiological requirements or viability of the organism. In some situations, such as in pleural or cerebrospinal infection, PCR stands out because of its speed, sensitivity and specificity15 16 18. A recent evaluation of PCR sensitivity using the primers described by Eisenach et al5 suggest that it allows the detection of three copies of the M. tuberculosis genome/ml1 5. The method may therefore be used for the early detection of M. tuberculosis growth on liquid medium. We present here a reliable, simple and fast PCR method for tuberculosis detection in human fluids.

MATERIAL AND METHODS

Seventy-three specimens were obtained from 56 patients of the Hospital das Clínicas — Medical Science Faculty of the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP) São Paulo, Brazil. Thirty were pleural fluids (PF), 26 pleural biopsies (PB) and 17 cerebrospinal fluids (CSF). All patients presented exudative pleural effusions or symptoms of meningeal disease. In both circumstances, tuberculosis had to be ruled out. After signing an informed consent, the patients had their clinical specimens analyzed using bacterioscopy, traditional culture methods, microscopic examination of the pleural biopsies and PCR. The gold standard used for the diagnosis of meningeal tuberculosis was the positive culture for M. tuberculosis in the cerebrospinal fluid. For pleural tuberculosis, we considered positive those specimens with positive culture for M. tuberculosis in the pleural fluid and/or in the biopsy or the demonstration of granulomas in the biopsy fragment15 16 18. The fragments of pleural biopsies were cultured, typed for Mycobacterium tuberculosis and also submitted to histologic examination.

Two DNA extraction methods were used: one, simple and fast consisted of heating the sample during 10 minutes at 100ºC. Afterwards, the samples were used directly in the PCR reaction (PCR1). In parallel, we extracted DNA from another aliquot of the same sample using proteinase K over-night digestion, phenol/chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation (PCR2)14. We used a specific 240bp primer set of primers for the complex M. tuberculosis/bovis, a fragment called MPB64: sense 5' TCC GCT GCC AGT CGT CTT CC 3'and antisense 5'GTC CTC GCG AGT CTA GGC CA 3'4 8. The PCR products obtained were not satisfactory, possibly because most of the samples had less than 10-100 tubercle bacilli. Therefore, we designed another pair of primers to amplify an inner sequence: sense 5'ATT GTG CAA GGT GAA CGT AG 3'and antisense primer 5'AGC ATC GAG TCG ATC GCG GA 3'. PCR mixtures were prepared with 10µl of the product of the extraction, 50pmol of each primer, 100µM dNTPs, 10mM Tris HCl (pH = 9.0 at 25oC), 50mM KCl, 1,5mM mGC12, and 4U Taq polymerase (Promega Co, Madison, WI) in a final volume of 100µl. Amplifications were carried out for 35 cycles with 1 minute denaturation at 94º C, 55ºC annealing for 1.5 minutes and primer extension at 72ºC for 3 minutes. We used a sample of distilled water as a negative control and samples of M. tuberculosis DNA extracted from a known culture (strain H37 from Institute Adolpho Lutz, Brazil) as positive controls. In order to perform a nested PCR, an aliquot of 10µl was removed from the initial reaction and directly added to the new reaction, carried out for 30 cycles at 94ºC for 1 minute, 55ºC for 1 minute and 72ºC for 1 minute. PF and CSF samples were also cultured in the egg-based (Lowenstein-Jensen) media and the culture supernatant was also used in the PCR. The PCR products were then analyzed by electrophoresis using a 2% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide and examined under ultraviolet light.

Statistical analysis. Data were analyzed by the c2 test. The level of significance was taken as p < 0.05. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of the proposed test were calculated according to standard methods10.

RESULTS

The results of all methods for pleural tuberculosis diagnosis are compared in Table 1. Among the 19 cases investigated, 6 were positive with PCR1 and 13 cases were positive with PCR2. In Table 2 we compare the results of the two extraction methods used: PCR1 and PCR2, in the diagnosis PF and CSF. Seven cases out of the 19 positive PF were detected with PCR1 and 14 with PCR2. Just 1 sample of CSF was positive according to the gold standard, but 3 could be detected by PCR1 and also by PCR2 (the same three cases), suggesting these patients could be harboring a tuberculosis disease not detectable by standard means. PCR2 extraction method provided better results than the PCR1 method (c2; p < 0.01).

Table 3 shows PCR2 results compared with gold standard methods for both pleural and meningeal tuberculosis. Using this nested PCR method, we achieved a sensitivity of 70%, specificity of 88%, positive predictive value of 82% and negative predictive value of 80%10. These data were not different in the CSF group compared with PF group (c2; not significant).

DISCUSSION

Although considered primarily a pulmonary disease, tuberculosis can affect any organ system. Central nervous system involvement is potentially devastating and occurs with escalating frequency in both immunocompetent and immunologically incompetent populations. When we are dealing with specimens such as pleural and cerebrospinal fluids, known for their little positivity in bacterioscopy, most commonly used diagnostic methods present low sensitivity and/or are time consuming. Culture and histology exam of fragments obtained by pleural biopsy can increase the accuracy of the diagnosis, however they require an invasive procedure. Microscopic examination of CSF for acid-fast bacilli also has low sensitivity in meningeal tuberculosis and, especially in patients without AIDS, positive results are rare9. On the other hand, pleural and meningeal tuberculosis need to be promptly and reliably diagnosed. PCR techniques emerged as a very useful implement in these cases augmenting the diagnosis sensitivity dramatically3. Moreover, M. tuberculosis detection by molecular methods may also play a role in laboratory safety and, therefore, in laboratory costs, since after the initial extraction procedure, only non-infectious materials are handled15. PCR is expected to be more specific and sensitive than the routine procedure for diagnosis, but it is also more costly1. Cost-effectiveness comparisons of PCR versus smear examination showed no advantages of the former for the diagnosis of tuberculosis12. However, PCR can be of great value detecting very few bacilli when a rapid diagnosis is imperative, like in pleural and meningeal infections. Also, the largest contributing cost component is the cost of the PCR-kit12. We may be able to substantially reduce this cost standardizing home-made methods. New studies involving fine needle aspirates may also be envisaged, improving the diagnosis in many cases17.

MPB-64 insertion element has been widely demonstrated to be highly specificity for the M. tuberculosis complex4 8. Tested against the IS6110 and the 65Kda HSP fragments, it gave less false positive results8. Some handicaps had to be overcome, such as the challenging mycobacterium DNA extraction from liquids where bacilli are very sparse. Phenolchloroform-proteinase K method provided a material of good quality for PCR. The use of a nested amplification increased both sensitivity and specificity of the PCR process.

In conclusion, we validated a nested-PCR technique using MPB64 fragment in the diagnosis of pleural and meningeal tuberculosis in our specimens, confirming it to be a powerful diagnostic tool with a good sensitivity (70%), a high specificity (88%), positive predictive value of 82% and negative predictive value of 80%. We demonstrated that the method is reliable, fast and specific, comparing positively with all other similar methods reported in the literature4 5 8.

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  • 1
    . Medical School, Marilia, SP, Brazil.
  • 2
    . Pulmonary Disease Department, Universidade de Campinas, Campinas, SP, Brazil.
  • 3
    . Department of Clinical Pathology, UNICAMP, Campinas, SP, Brazil.
  • 4
    . Hematology, UNICAMP, Campinas, SP, Brazil.
  • 5
    . Internal Medicine, UNICAMP and Laboratory of Cancer Molecular Genetics-FCM/UNICAMP, Campinas, SP, Brazil.
    Address to: Dra Laura Sterian Ward. GEMOCA/Med Int/Clin Med/FCM/UNICAMP, Cidade Universitária Zeferino Vaz, 13083-970 Campinas, São Paulo State, Brazil.
    Telefax: 55 19 289-4107.
    e-mail:
    /Recebido para publicação em 16/7/99.
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      22 Aug 2000
    • Date of issue
      June 2000

    History

    • Received
      16 July 1999
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