Artigo Revisado por pares

Biphasic emergence of active tuberculosis in rheumatoid arthritis patients receiving TNFα inhibitors: the utility of IFNγ assay

2011; BMJ; Volume: 71; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1136/annrheumdis-2011-200489

ISSN

1468-2060

Autores

Der‐Yuan Chen, Gwan‐Han Shen, Yi‐Ming Chen, Hsin‐Hua Chen, Chia‐Wei Hsieh, Joung‐Liang Lan,

Tópico(s)

Mycobacterium research and diagnosis

Resumo

Objectives The risk of active tuberculosis increases in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients receiving antitumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) therapy. Longitudinal data concerning serial interferon γ (IFNγ) assays for detecting tuberculosis have been limited. This study investigated the time course of the development of active tuberculosis, and evaluated the utility of serial QuantiFERON-TB Gold (QFT-G) assays for detecting its emergence in RA patients undergoing long-term anti-TNFα therapy. Methods 242 RA patients who received anti-TNFα therapy and serial QFT-G assays were prospectively evaluated. QFT-G was performed by measuring IFNγ levels in whole blood treated with tuberculosis-specific antigens. Results Among 242 RA patients, 75 (31.0%) had a positive tuberculin skin test (TST) and 45 (18.6%) had positive QFT-G results, with another nine (3.7%) showing indeterminate QFT-G assay. Isoniazid prophylaxis was given to 37 patients with TST+/QFT-G+ results and 24 TST+/QFT-G− patients with TST induration diameter ≧10 mm. Four patients (three with baseline QFT-G+ results) developed tuberculosis within the first 3 months of anti-TNFα therapy, whereas five patients with baseline TST−/QFT-G− results developed active tuberculosis after 20–24 months9 anti-TNFα therapy. Progressively rising levels of released IFNγ (2.17±0.98 vs 5.93±2.92 IU/ml in early secretory antigenic target-6-stimulated well; 1.12±0.84 vs 2.96±1.02 IU/ml in culture filtrate protein-10-stimulated well) were observed in those who developed tuberculosis early in anti-TNFα therapy. QFT-G conversion was found in baseline QFT-G-negative patients who developed tuberculosis late in treatment. Conclusion The emergence of active tuberculosis follows a biphasic pattern. Persistently high levels of released IFNγ or QFT-G conversion strongly indicate the development of active tuberculosis in patients undergoing long-term anti-TNFα therapy.

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