作者
Wenshu Zheng,Sylvia M. LaCourse,Bofan Song,Dhiraj Kumar Singh,Mayank Khanna,Juan Olivo,Joshua Stern,Jaclyn N Escudero,Carlos Vergara,Fangfang Zhang,Shaobai Li,Shu Wang,Lisa M. Cranmer,Zhen Huang,Christine M. Bojanowski,Duran Bao,Irene Njuguna,Yating Xiao,Dalton Wamalwa,Duc T. Nguyen,Li Yang,Elizabeth Maleche‐Obimbo,Nguyen Viet Nhung,Lili Zhang,Ha Phan,Jia Fan,Bo Ning,Chen-Zhong Li,Christopher J. Lyon,Edward A. Graviss,Grace John‐Stewart,Charles D. Mitchell,Alistair J. Ramsay,Deepak Kaushal,Rongguang Liang,Eddy Pérez-Then,Ye Hu
摘要
Abstract Sensitive and specific blood-based assays for the detection of pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis would reduce mortality associated with missed diagnoses, particularly in children. Here we report a nanoparticle-enhanced immunoassay read by dark-field microscopy that detects two Mycobacterium tuberculosis virulence factors (the glycolipid lipoarabinomannan and its carrier protein) on the surface of circulating extracellular vesicles. In a cohort study of 147 hospitalized and severely immunosuppressed children living with HIV, the assay detected 58 of the 78 (74%) cases of paediatric tuberculosis, 48 of the 66 (73%) cases that were missed by microbiological assays, and 8 out of 10 (80%) cases undiagnosed during the study. It also distinguished tuberculosis from latent-tuberculosis infections in non-human primates. We adapted the assay to make it portable and operable by a smartphone. With further development, the assay may facilitate the detection of tuberculosis at the point of care, particularly in resource-limited settings.