The Association of Peripheral T Lymphocyte Subsets Disseminated Infection by Mycobacterium Tuberculosis in HIV-Negative Patients: A Retrospective Observational Study

Author:

Li Qiao1,Liu Shengsheng2ORCID,Li Xiaomeng1,Yang Ruifang1,Liang Chen1,Yu Jiajia1,Lin Wenhong2,Liu Yi1,Yao Cong1,Pang Yu1,Dai Xiaowei3,Li Chuanyou1,Tang Shenjie4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, Beijing Chest Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing 101149, China

2. Department of Tuberculosis, Anhui Chest Hospital, Hefei 230022, China

3. Beijing Center for Disease Prevention and Control, Beijing 100035, China

4. Multidisciplinary Diagnosis and Treatment Centre for Tuberculosis, Beijing Tuberculosis and Thoracic Tumor Research Institute/Beijing Chest Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing 101149, China

Abstract

Background and Objective: This study was performed to investigate the association of peripheral T lymphocyte subsets with disseminated infection (DI) by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) in HIV-negative patients. Methods and Materials: The study included 587 HIV-negative tuberculosis (TB) patients. Results: In TB patients with DI, the proportion of CD4+ T cells decreased, the proportion of CD8+ T cells increased, and the ratio of CD4+/CD8+ T cells decreased. According to univariate analysis, smoking, alcohol consumption, rifampicin-resistance, retreatment, and high sputum bacterial load were linked to lower likelihood of developing MTB dissemination. Multivariate analysis indicated that after adjustment for alcohol use, smoking, retreatment, smear, culture, rifampicin-resistance, and CD4+/CD8+, the proportion of CD8+ T cells (but not CD4+ T cells) was independently and positively associated with the prevalence of DI in HIV-negative pulmonary TB (PTB) patients. Conclusions: Examining T lymphocyte subsets is of great value for evaluating the immune function of HIV-negative TB patients, and an increase in the CD8+ T cell proportion may be a critical clue regarding the cause of DI in such patients.

Funder

Beijing Key Clinical Specialty Project

Capital Medical Development Special Foundation

Scientific Research Project of Beijing Educational Committee

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference34 articles.

1. World Health Organization (2022, August 30). Global Tuberculosis Report 2021. Available online: https://www.aidsdatahub.org/resource/global-tuberculosis-report-2021.

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3. Tuberculosis;Furin;Lancet,2019

4. Epidemiology of Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis among Inpatients, China, 2008-2017;Pang;Emerg. Infect. Dis.,2019

5. The Innate Immune Response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection;Stanley;Annu. Rev. Immunol.,2021

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