PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Immune status changing helps diagnose osteoarticular tuberculosis.

  • Tuo Liang,
  • Jiarui Chen,
  • GuoYong Xu,
  • Zide Zhang,
  • Jiang Xue,
  • Haopeng Zeng,
  • Jie Jiang,
  • Tianyou Chen,
  • Zhaojie Qin,
  • Hao Li,
  • Zhen Ye,
  • Yunfeng Nie,
  • Chong Liu,
  • Xinli Zhan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0252875
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. e0252875

Abstract

Read online

ObjectiveThis study is aimed to develop a new nomogram for the clinical diagnosis of osteoarticular tuberculosis (TB).MethodsxCell score estimation to obtained the immune cell type abundance scores. We downloaded the expression profile of GSE83456 from GEO and proceed xCell score estimation. The routine blood examinations of 326 patients were collected for further validation. We analyzed univariate and multivariate logistic regression to identified independent predicted factor for developing the nomogram. The performance of the nomogram was assessed using the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. The correlation of ESR with lymphocytes, monocytes, and ML ratio was performed and visualized in osteoarticular TB patients.ResultsCompared with the healthy control group in the dataset GSE83456, the xCell score of basophils, monocytes, neutrophils, and platelets was higher, while lymphoid was lower in the EPTB group. The clinical data showed that the cell count of monocytes were much higher, while the cell counts of lymphocytes were lower in the osteoarticular TB group. AUCs of the nomogram was 0.798 for the dataset GSE83456, and 0.737 for the clinical data. We identified the ML ratio, BMI, and ESR as the independent predictive factors for osteoarticular TB diagnosis and constructed a nomogram for the clinical diagnosis of osteoarticular TB. AUCs of this nomogram was 0.843.ConclusionsWe demonstrated a significant change between the ML ratio of the EPTB and non-TB patients. Moreover, we constructed a nomogram for the clinical diagnosis of the osteoarticular TB diagnosis, which works satisfactorily.