ATBdiscrimination: An in Silico Tool for Identification of Active Tuberculosis Disease Based on Routine Blood Test and T‑SPOT.TB Detection Results

Tuberculosis remains one of the deadliest infectious diseases worldwide. Only 5–15% of people infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis develop active TB disease (ATB), while others remain latently infected (LTBI) during their lifetime, which has a completely different clinical treatment schedule. Ho...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of chemical information and modeling 2019-11, Vol.59 (11), p.4561-4568
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Jiangpeng, Bai, Jun, Wang, Wei, Xi, Lili, Zhang, Pengyi, Lan, Jingfeng, Zhang, Liansheng, Li, Shuyan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tuberculosis remains one of the deadliest infectious diseases worldwide. Only 5–15% of people infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis develop active TB disease (ATB), while others remain latently infected (LTBI) during their lifetime, which has a completely different clinical treatment schedule. However, most current clinical diagnostic methods are based on the immune response of M. tuberculosis infections and cannot distinguish ATB from LTBIs. Thus, the rapid diagnosis of active or latent tuberculosis infections remains a serious challenge for clinicians. In this work, based on the test data of a total of 478 patients, 36 blood biochemical data were specially included with T-SPOT.TB detection results which are all from routine clinical practice as commercially available. Then a discrimination method to detect ATB infections was successfully developed based on these data by the random forest algorithm. This method presents a robust classification performance with AUC as 0.9256 and 0.8731 for the cross-validation set and the external validation set, respectively. This work suggests an innovative strategy for identification of ATB disease from a single drop of blood with advantages of being timely, efficient, and economical. It also provides valuable information for the comprehensive understanding of TB with deep associations between TB infection and routine blood test data. The web server of this identification method, called ATBdiscrimination, is now available online at http://lishuyan.lzu.edu.cn/ATB/ATBdiscrimination.html.
ISSN:1549-9596
1549-960X
DOI:10.1021/acs.jcim.9b00678