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Immunology in Tuberculosis: Challenges in Monitoring of Disease Activity and Identifying Correlates of Protection
- Source: Current Pharmaceutical Design, Volume 17, Issue 27, Sep 2011, p. 2853 - 2862
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- 01 Sep 2011
Abstract
Humans have always lived with tubercle bacilli. Host susceptibility - both inherited and acquired - determines whether an individual infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis will eventually fall ill and develop tuberculosis (TB). After infection with M. tuberculosis, a latent TB infection may ensue reflected by immune recognition of specific antigenic epitopes expressed by M. tuberculosis - the Region of Difference 1 proteins ESAT-6 and CFP-10 leading to interferon gamma release in vitro. Multi-Drug-Resistant TB has emerged as an enormous infectious threat in certain regions in the world, and the Acquired immunodeficiency by co-infection with HIV has accelerated the TB epidemic even further. A paradoxical response - or Immune Response Inflammatory Syndrome in the context of treatment of HIV co-infection - is an increased inflammatory reaction during effective reduction in the bacterial load. This should be differentiated from treatment failure. A huge challenge is to develop novel markers that can differentiate paradoxical responses from treatment failure. We discuss the role of protection of vaccines - especially BCG, iron metabolism and the role of vitamin D.