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TB in children: still a difficult task for the clinician? Beate Kampmann MD FRCPCH PhD A/Professor in Paediatric Infection & Immunity Consultant Paediatrician Imperial College London, UK and Themeleader Vaccinology MRC-The Gambia Overview • What is special about TB in children? • Epidemiology- who are our patients? • Diagnostic challenges: - Differences between adults and children - New Immunological Tools-how helpful are they? • Therapy: Drugs in kids- any differences? • Prevention: new TB vaccines on the horizon Tuberculosis in Children…. the problem • Significant Morbidity and Mortality 1.4 million cases annually (95% developing countries) 450,000 Deaths estimated 10-15% of global burden related to childhood TB • Different clinical spectrum of disease 5-10% < 2 yr meningitis disseminated disease more common • Co infection with HIV- clinically very difficult to distinguish • Remains a diagnostic challenge paucibacillary, rarely culture confirmed : Sputum smear positive in 10.3% (10-14yr), 1.8% (5-9) and1.6% (<5) Cultures positive 21% (10-14), 5% (5-9) and 4.2% (<5), Tuberculosis in Children differs from adults • Immune responses are Age-dependent: Following infection 40% < 2 yr, 25% 2-5 yr and 5-15% of older children will develop disease within 2 years • Majority of disease results from progression of primary infection rather than reactivation might affect detectable immune responses • More likely to be extrapulmonary and disseminated, particularly in infants Newton, Kampmann The Lancet Infectious Diseases, August 2008; Vol 8: 498-510 Tuberculosis in the UK: ca. 9000 cases in 2009 39% in London Percentage of TB cases of foreign origin, 2006 Not included or not reporting to EuroTB 0% – 4% 5% – 19% 20% – 49% > 49% Andorra Malta Monaco San Marino Trends in incidence of TB in children under 15 years by ethnic group in London, 2001-2006 UK: Tuberculosis rates by age Development of TB in immigrant children Sources: Enhanced Tuberculosis Surveillance, Labour Force Survey population estimates, Abubakar et al Arch. Dis. Child. 2008;93;1017-1021; Is the general population at risk of disease from affected migrants? Tuberculosis rates by place of birth: 2000-2005 • Little evidence to suggest that the wider population are at significant risk Source, Enhanced Tuberculosis Surveillance Children acquire TB from (household) contacts If you ask yourself, does this child have TB, ask yourself: is there TB in this family? Presentation of PAEDIATRIC TB Case 1 -14 month Asian girl -previously well, no F/H of TB -3 weeks cough and unwell -admitted to local hospital -low grade fever -normal chest examination WHAT INVESTIGATIONS WOULD YOU DO? PAEDIATRIC TB Case 1 Mantoux test: 2mm Gastric washings; - microscopy and (later) culture negative -Rx. Erythromycin and Augmentin -no improvement on antibiotics -bronchoscopy planned PAEDIATRIC TB Case 1 1 day before bronchoscopy: - afebrile, less cough, looking well -continued improvement, - discharged home, no ∆ PAEDIATRIC TB Case 1 out-patient review 6 weeks later: -completely well, thriving, no cough “Grandfather admitted to local hospital with pulmonary TB” -repeat Mantoux: now 25mm -TB treatment commenced PAEDIATRIC TB Case 1 Discussion Points Primary TB in children: - spontaneous recovery is possible - diagnosis is difficult - no visible AFB - cultures usually negative - tuberculin test negative CHILDHOOD EXPOSURE PRIMARY PULMONARY INFECTION Successful immune response WELL ADULT IMMUNITY (live MTB) LATE REACTIVATION OF PULMONARY DISEASE FORMS CAVITY CHILDHOOD EXPOSURE PRIMARY PULMONARY INFECTION Self healing?? Inadequate immune response PROGRESSIVE PULMONARY DISEASE Lympho/ haematogenous spread MILIARY TB or EXTRA-PULMONARY DISEASE Miliary TB L Wyld Aug 2010 Diagnostic tests Microbiological Organism smear culture DNA The “gold-standard” Appearance in sputum Appearance in culture ‘cording’ PAEDIATRIC TB: Implications of bacterial load Paediatric TB: 106 bacteria Adult TB: >109 bacteria - children less infectious - difficulty in confirming diagnosis - difficulty in detecting resistance Diagnostic tests Immunological Host response skin test antigen-specific production of IFNγ Acknowledgement & Thanks IGRA in children What are IGRA and why do we need them How do they work What do they contribute to the diagnosis of active or latent TB Performance in the immunocompromised Remaining research questions Conclusions Acknowledgement & Thanks Paediatric TB: Diagnostic challenges due to low bacillary load Paediatric TB: 106 bacteria Adult TB: >109 bacteria • children less infectious • lack of “gold standard”: microbiological confirmation exceptional • difficulty in detecting resistance Acknowledgement & Thanks Tuberculin skin test (TST) • technically difficult in children • UK: 2 units of SSI tuberculin (PPD) > 200 antigens, incl. BCG Ag • Read-out: degree of hypersensitivity • Problem: lacks specificity and sensitivity Acknowledgement & Thanks 2 commercially available assays Antigens used: ESAT-6 CFP10 +/- TB7.7 mitogen negative control In principal: can both distinguish between BCG vaccination and M.tuberculosis infection but: Paucity of data in children Confusion about use of IGRA Thanksof BCG Gene Acknowledgement deletions and the& origin major antigens ESAT6 and CFP10 M. tuberculosis 10 deletions 64 genes M. bovis 4/5 deletions RD1 region 30/40 genes BCG substrains T cell tests (interferon-γ) that distinguish M. tuberculosis infection from BCG vaccination Principal of Quantiferon-Gold in tube assay AG presentation (ESAT-6, CFP-10, TB7.7) Ag-specific cytokine secretion Cytokine quantification by ELISA Principal of ELISPOT assay Coating antibody Biotinylated 2nd PBMC+antigen antibody Avidin-peroxidase IFN-production each spot is an antigen-specific T cell that has released IFN IGRA and National TB guidelines UK: NICE Guidelines 2006 http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG33 & Thanks IGRA Acknowledgement and the diagnosis of active TB Signs and symptoms Contact history Travel Active TB Radiology Microbiology TST IGRA IGRA versus TST: our own research Spot the Difference Interferon-release assays (IGRA) in paediatric active and latent tuberculosis in London - a side-by-side comparison with TST Kampmann B, Whittaker E, Williams A, Walters S, Gordon A, Martinez-Alier N, Williams B, Crook AM, Hutton AM, Anderson ST. Interferon- gamma release assays do not identify more children with active TB than TST. Eur Respir J. 2009 Jun;33(6):1374-8 & Thanks IGRA Acknowledgement and the diagnosis of active TB IGRA missed between 20-40% of definite active TB Acknowledgement Thanks of active TB Combining IGRA and TST in the&diagnosis A combination of TST and IGRA increases sensitivity to above 93% & Thanks IGRA and theAcknowledgement diagnosis of active TB- other studies • Bamford et al, Arch Dis Child 2009 Oct 8 (Epub ahead of print) UK-wide study of 333 children from 6 large UK centers, 49 with culture-confirmed TB: TST had a sensitivity of 82%, Quantiferon-Gold in tube (QFT-IT) had a sensitivity of 78% and T-Spot.TB of 66%. Neither IGRA performed significantly better than a TST with a cut-off of 15 mm. Combining results of TST and IGRA increased the sensitivity to 96% for TST plus T-Spot.TB and 91% for TST plus QFG-IT in the definite TB cohort. • Nicol et al; Pediatrics 2009,Jan; 123(1): 38-43 Comparison of T-SPOT.TB assay and TST for the evaluation of young children at high risk for tuberculosis Sensitivity of the T-SPOT.TB was no better than that of the tuberculin skin test (>10mm) for culture-confirmed tuberculosis (n=10) (50% T-Spot and 80% TST) and was poorer for the combined group of culture-confirmed and clinically probable tuberculosis (n=58) (40% T-Spot and 52% TST). • Bianchi et al, PIDJ 2009, Jun;28(6):510-4 IGRA was positive in 15 of 16 (93.8%) children with active pulmonary TB • Connell et al, Thorax 2006, Jul;61(7):616-20 The whole blood IFN-gamma assay was positive in all 9 children (100%) with TB disease. & Thanks IGRA Acknowledgement and the diagnosis of active TB A negative IGRA does not exclude active TB IGRA is not a rule-out test, but can add value to additional investigations & Thanks IGRA Acknowledgement and the diagnosis of latent TB Contact history Travel/Immi gration Absence of clinical signs and symptoms Latent TB negative Radiology TST IGRA IGRA and the diagnosis of latent TB • No “gold standard” for LTBI • Acknowledged discrepancy of TST and IGRA results - due to poor specificity of TST (Kampmann ERJ 2009, Connell PlosOne 2008, Bianchi PIDJ 2009) • Which IGRA is better? - Good agreement between 2 IGRAS (92%, k=0.82) (similar to Connell et al, PLoS One. 2008 Jul: agreement between QFT-IT and T-SPOT.TB 93%, k=0.83). • Currently: ? “over-treatment” by paediatricians - but: to date no studies of negative predictive value of IGRA in children • Performance in very young children- conflicting messages • Increased sensitivity in immuno-compromised hosts IGRA in the immuno-compromised host Active TB Detection of tuberculosis in HIV-infected children using an Elispot Davies et al, AIDS. 2009 May 15;23(8):961-9. ELISPOT was positive in 14/21 (66%) with definite TB ELISPOT was more sensitive than TST for the detection of active TB in HIV-infected children: positive ELISPOT compared with a positive TST [25/39 (64%) vs. 10/34 (29%), P = 0.005] “However, the sensitivity of current ELISPOT assays is not sufficiently high to be used as a rule out test for TB.” Latent TB High level of discordant IGRA results in HIV-infected adults and children Mandalakas et al: Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2008 Apr;12(4):417-23. HIV+ve children (n=23): tests yielded discordant results 61% of individuals testing positive with T-SPOT.TB, 41% with TST and 28% with QuantiFERON TB Gold (QTF)- older version Algorithm for use of IGRA in HIV+ve patients Newly diagnosed HIV or new immigrant with HIV IGRA at baseline negative ? Immune system - check PHA positive ? Lack of exposure /no infection Investigate for active TB Repeat IGRA when “immune reconstituted” Latent TB Active TB Use as baseline result if concerns of active TB arise later chemopro TB Tx Remaining questions and further research Should we abandon the TST in screening for LTBI ? • Reliability of performance of IGRA in very young children • How do we interpret indeterminate results • Negative predictive value, i.e. How many children will develop active TB if TST > 15 mm, but untreated with chemoprophylaxis as IGRA negative, according to current guidelines • Is the step-wise approach of TST first, IGRA second justified? How many children with negative TST would have a positive IGRA at screening • Does the TST boost the IGRA responses Current evidence suggests that boosting occurs, but not within first 72 hours • (Short-term) reproducibility of the commercial IGRA Can IGRA be used to monitor therapy or to predict development of active TB Conclusions • IGRA should not currently replace the • IGRA detect immune memory do not confirm the TSTbut in children presence or absence of M. tuberculosis- active or latent • higher specificity than TST not forget the many • we the should additional challenging question in • designed to test for evidence of TB infection, not TB disease childhood TB • can be used as a rule-in testmicrobiological for active TB in children, better diagnostics better biomarkers than IFN but not as a rule-out test better vaccines • higher sensitivity in immunocompromised patients compared to TST improved understanding of primary TB Diagnosis of TB in children • Poor microbiology • Suspicion rather than confirmation • Treatment dilemma TB treatment in children • Treatment regimens are adopted from adult schemes • Children respond very well to treatment, incl DOTS • Dosages need to be adjusted for weight • Pharmakokinetics in children differ from adults - INH- 5-10 mg/kg, rapid acetylators (1) - Ethambutol 15-25 mg/kg (2) 1: Schaaf et al, Arch Dis Child 2005; 90:614 2: Donald et al, Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 2006; 10:1318 Drugs and ADHERENCE IF YOU DON’T TAKE THE DRUGS, THEY WON’T WORK PAEDIATRIC TB POOR ADHERENCE Support -hospital TB clinic -community -health care workers -social services -DOT (Directly Observed Therapy) -accurate record of treatment -successful treatment -prevention of resistance -different adult -different location L Wyld Aug 2010 New vaccines on the horizon • Four main types of vaccines are currently under development: 1.Vaccines based on BCG 2.Subunit (protein and peptide) vaccines 3.DNA vaccines 4. Live attenuated and inactivated whole cell vaccines E.Whittaker & B.Kampmann, Vaccines in Practice, 2011 Take Home messages: • Think of the diagnosis, especially in the epidemiological context • TB is a family disease • The diagnosis of active TB in children is based on a jigsaw of findings • IGRA can be an additional piece in the jigsaw, but a negative IGRA does not exclude active TB • TB therapy needs a lot of support Comprehensive review of childhood TB in Paediatric Resp Rev 2010 • founded in April 2009 • to date: 35 members from 16 European countries, incl. Eastern Europe • includes clinicians, epidemiologists and laboratory scientists www.ptbnet.org Aims • enhance the understanding of the pediatric aspects of tuberculosis • facilitate collaborative research studies for childhood TB in Europe • provide expert opinion through excellence in science and teaching • establish a better evidence base for diagnosis and treatment of TB in children Thank you Any questions? Contact details: [email protected]