Early Mycobacterial Antigens in the Immunodiagnosis of Latent Tuberculosis Infection
Aigul Utegenova, Lazzat Kassayeva, Bayan Turdalina, Aliya Baiduissenova, Ayaz Yktiyarov, Marat Dusmagambetov, Evgeni Sokurenko

TL;DR
This paper reviews how specific tuberculosis antigens improve the detection of latent TB infection, especially in BCG-vaccinated populations.
Contribution
The paper critically evaluates the immunobiological properties and diagnostic performance of RD1-encoded antigens for latent TB immunodiagnosis.
Findings
ESAT-6, CFP-10, and TB7.7 antigens improve diagnostic specificity over traditional BCG-dependent tests.
IGRAs and ESAT-6/CFP-10-based skin tests show comparable accuracy but lack ability to distinguish latent from active TB.
Latency-associated antigens and biomarkers like IP-10 show promise but require further validation for clinical use.
Abstract
Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) represents a major global health concern as it constitutes the principal reservoir for future tuberculosis (TB) disease. Its identification is particularly important in Bacille Calmette–Guérin (BCG)-vaccinated populations, where cross-reactivity of purified protein derivative limits the specificity of the tuberculin skin test and hampers targeted preventive therapy. Early Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigens encoded within the RD1 region, especially ESAT-6, CFP-10 and TB7.7, have enabled the development of antigen-specific interferon-gamma release assays (IGRAs) and recombinant skin tests with improved BCG-independent specificity. This narrative review integrates and critically appraises current evidence on the immunobiological properties of early and latency-associated antigens, the cellular mechanisms underlying T-cell-dependent immune reactivity,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Infectious Diseases and Tuberculosis · Immunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders
