Impaired resolution of blood transcriptomes through tuberculosis treatment with diabetes comorbidity
BACKGROUND: People with diabetes are more likely to develop tuberculosis (TB) and to have poor TB-treatment outcomes than those without. We previously showed that blood transcriptomes in people with TB-diabetes (TB-DM) co-morbidity have excessive inflammatory and reduced interferon responses at diag...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical and translational medicine 2023-09, Vol.13 (9) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | BACKGROUND: People with diabetes are more likely to develop tuberculosis (TB) and to have poor TB-treatment outcomes than those without. We previously showed that blood transcriptomes in people with TB-diabetes (TB-DM) co-morbidity have excessive inflammatory and reduced interferon responses at diagnosis. It is unknown whether this persists through treatment and contributes to the adverse outcomes. METHODS: Pulmonary TB patients recruited in South Africa, Indonesia and Romania were classified as having TB-DM, TB with prediabetes, TB-related hyperglycaemia or TB-only, based on glycated haemoglobin concentration at TB diagnosis and after 6 months of TB treatment. Gene expression in blood at diagnosis and intervals throughout treatment was measured by unbiased RNA-Seq and targeted Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification. Transcriptomic data were analysed by longitudinal mixed-model regression to identify whether genes were differentially expressed between clinical groups through time. Predictive models of TB-treatment response across groups were developed and cross-tested. RESULTS: Gene expression differed between TB and TB-DM patients at diagnosis and was modulated by TB treatment in all clinical groups but to different extents, such that differences remained in TB-DM relative to TB-only throughout. Expression of some genes increased through TB treatment, whereas others decreased: some were persistently more highly expressed in TB-DM and others in TB-only patients. Genes involved in innate immune responses, anti-microbial immunity and inflammation were significantly upregulated in people with TB-DM throughout treatment. The overall pattern of change was similar across clinical groups irrespective of diabetes status, permitting models predictive of TB treatment to be developed. CONCLUSIONS: Exacerbated transcriptome changes in TB-DM take longer to resolve during TB treatment, meaning they remain different from those in uncomplicated TB after treatment completion. This may indicate a prolonged inflammatory response in TB-DM, requiring prolonged treatment or host-directed therapy for complete cure. Development of transcriptome-based biomarker signatures of TB-treatment response should include people with diabetes for use across populations. |
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ISSN: | 2001-1326 2001-1326 |
DOI: | 10.1002/ctm2.1375 |