A set of plasmatic microRNA related to innate immune response highly predicts the onset of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome in tuberculosis co-infected HIV individuals (ANRS-12358 study)
Polidy Pean, Ratana Meng, Eliott Benichou, Pichsivannary Srey, Bunnet Dim, Laurence Borand, Olivier Marcy, Didier Laureillard, François-Xavier Blanc, Tineke Cantaert, Yoann Madec, Laurence Weiss, Daniel Scott-Algara

TL;DR
This study identifies specific microRNAs in the blood that can predict the onset of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome in HIV and tuberculosis co-infected patients.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel set of plasmatic microRNAs as predictive biomarkers for TB-IRIS in HIV-TB co-infected individuals.
Findings
Twelve out of 26 microRNAs showed significant differences between IRIS and non-IRIS patients.
Five microRNAs could discriminate IRIS from non-IRIS with AUC scores between 0.74 and 0.92.
A combination of two or three microRNAs identified IRIS with 100% sensitivity and high specificity.
Abstract
After initiation of combination antiretroviral treatment (cART), HIV-1/tuberculosis coinfected patients are at high risk of developing tuberculosis-associated immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (TB-IRIS). MicroRNAs, small molecules of approximately 22 nucleotides, which regulate post-transcriptional gene expression and their profile has been proposed as a biomarker for many diseases. We tested whether the microRNA profile could be a predictive biomarker for TB-IRIS. Twenty-six selected microRNAs involved in the regulation of the innate immune response were investigated. Free plasmatic and microRNA-derived exosomes were measured by flow cytometry. The plasma from 74 HIV-1+TB+ individuals (35 IRIS and 39 non-IRIS) at the time of the diagnosis and before any treatment (baseline) of CAMELIA trial (ANRS1295-CIPRA KH001-DAIDS-ES ID10425); 15 HIV+TB− and 23 HIV−TB+, both naïve of any…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfectious Diseases and Tuberculosis · Extracellular vesicles in disease · Orthopedic Infections and Treatments
