Cerebrospinal Fluid Adenosine Deaminase for the Diagnosis of Tuberculous Meningitis
Ashok Kumar Pannu, Suresh Selvam, N Rahman, Devender Kumar, Atul Saroch, Arun K. Sharma, Sunil Sethi, Rakesh Yadav, et al. (9 authors)
Biomarkers in Medicine · 2023-02
Abstract
Background: A consensus on the diagnostic utility of cerebrospinal fluid adenosine deaminase (ADA) for tuberculous meningitis (TBM) is lacking. Methods: Patients aged ≥12 years admitted with CNS infections were enrolled prospectively. ADA was measured with spectrophotometry. Results: We enrolled 251 TBM and 131 other CNS infections. The optimal cutoff of ADA was calculated at 5.5 U/l against microbiological reference standard with area under curve 0.743, sensitivity 80.7%, specificity 60.3%, positive likelihood ratio 2.03 and negative likelihood ratio 3.12. The widely used cutoff value 10 U/l had specificity 82% and sensitivity 50%. The discriminating power was higher for TBM versus viral meningoencephalitis than bacterial or cryptococcal meningitis. Conclusion: Cerebrospinal fluid ADA has a low-to-modest diagnostic utility.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Cerebrospinal fluid
- Adenosine deaminase
- Tuberculous meningitis
- Meningoencephalitis
- Tuberculosis
- Cutoff
- Meningitis
- Viral meningitis
- Pathology
- Internal medicine
- Immunology