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ESAT-6 and Ag85A Synthetic Peptides as Candidates for an Immunodiagnostic Test in Children with a Clinical Suspicion of Tuberculosis
Author(s) -
Zaı̈da Araujo,
Carlos Fernández de Larrea,
Diana López,
Jaime Isern-Kebschull,
Jacobus H. de Waard,
Isabel Hagel,
Milena Camargo,
Magnolia Vanegas,
Manuel A. Patarroyo
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
disease markers
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.912
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1875-8630
pISSN - 0278-0240
DOI - 10.1155/2021/6673250
Subject(s) - medicine , receiver operating characteristic , tuberculosis , indigenous , pediatrics , pathology , biology , ecology
Background Tuberculosis (TB) is being underdetected in children as most are smear-negative. This work was aimed at evaluating ESAT-6 and Ag85A synthetic peptides' serodiagnostic potential for diagnosing children having a clinical suspicion of TB.Methods The study involved 438 children: 77 Creole nonindigenous (13 suspected of having TB and 64 healthy ones) and 361 Warao indigenous children (39 suspected of TB and 322 healthy children). The approach's diagnostic information was compared using operational characteristics and receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves.Results Ag85A P-29879 had 94.6% sensitivity (AUC = 0.741: 0.651 to 0.819 95% CI) in indigenous children. ESAT-6 P-12036 and P-12037 had 100% and 92.3% of sensitivity (AUC = 0.929: 0.929: 0.846 to 0.975 95% CI and 0.791: 63.9 to 98.7 95% CI, respectively) in Creole children. ESAT-6 peptides also allowed a differentiation between children with TB and healthy ones.Conclusions Further validation of this approach could lead to developing a complementary tool for rapid TB diagnosis in children.

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