Abstract

BackgroundSpinal tuberculosis (TB) may have a variable, non-specific presentation including back pain with- or without- constitutional symptoms. Further tools are needed to aid early diagnosis of this potentially severe form of TB and immunological biomarkers may show potential in this regard. The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of host serum biomarkers to distinguish spinal TB from mechanical back pain.MethodsPatients with suspected spinal TB or suspected mechanical back pain were recruited from a tertiary hospital in the Western Cape, South Africa, and provided a blood sample for biomarker analysis. Diagnosis was subsequently confirmed using bacteriological testing, advanced imaging and/or clinical evaluation, as appropriate. The concentrations of 19 host biomarkers were evaluated in serum samples using the Luminex platform. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves and General Discriminant Analysis were used to identify biomarkers with the potential to distinguish spinal TB from mechanical back pain.ResultsTwenty-six patients with spinal TB and 17 with mechanical back pain were recruited. Seven out of 19 biomarkers were significantly different between groups, of which Fibrinogen, CRP, IFN-γ and NCAM were the individual markers with the highest discrimination utility (Area Under Curve ROC plot 0.88-0.99). A five-marker biosignature (CRP, NCAM, Ferritin, CXCL8 and GDF-15) correctly classified all study participants after leave-one-out cross-validation.ConclusionThis study identified host serum biomarkers with the potential to diagnose spinal TB, including a five-marker biosignature. These preliminary findings require validation in larger studies.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health priority with an estimated 10 million people worldwide developing TB disease in 2019 [1]

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of host serum biomarkers to distinguish spinal TB from mechanical back pain

  • Patients with suspected spinal TB or suspected mechanical back pain were recruited from a tertiary hospital in the Western Cape, South Africa, and provided a blood sample for biomarker analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health priority with an estimated 10 million people worldwide developing TB disease in 2019 [1]. With progression of the disease, those affected may develop serious sequelae such as spinal deformity, spinal instability and neurological deficit [2]. These individuals may require costly corrective surgery and are at risk of significant long-term morbidity [2]. Spinal TB represents only 1-3% of all TB cases [4,5,6], the absolute number of individuals affected may be considerable in countries with a high burden of TB [7,8,9], creating a need for vigilance and effective methods of screening and early diagnosis. The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of host serum biomarkers to distinguish spinal TB from mechanical back pain

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