TB Research

Value of urinary lipoarabinomannan levels for tuberculosis diagnosis and monitoring of therapy

Xiong Y, Shen Z, Dong B, Wang Y, Zhu Y, Wei H, Zhang D, Che Y

Frontiers in microbiology · 2025-08

Abstract

Background The urinary lipoarabinomannan (LAM) assay has emerged as a promising tool for tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis and treatment monitoring. This study aimed to evaluate the diagnostic and monitoring performance of LAM compared to Acid-fast bacilli (AFB), Mycobacteria Growth Indicator Tube (MGIT), and GeneXpert, and to establish its clinical utility in a stratified TB population. Methods A prospective cohort study included TB patients stratified by AFB/MGIT status into three groups. Diagnostic accuracy was tested against composite reference standard (CRS). Early monitoring performance was assessed via serial LAM measurements during 12-week treatment. ROC/KM/Cox analyses determined optimal thresholds and predictors of LAM conversion. Results Against CRS, LAM demonstrated a sensitivity of 58.75%, which was numerically higher than AFB smear (45.00%, p = 0.082) and comparable to MGIT culture (58.75%, p = 1.00), but numerically lower than GeneXpert (61.25%, p = 0.205). In the early monitoring phase, LAM showed sustained positivity in 11.54-51.72% at week 12, compared to p = 0.001) and double positive group (HR = 0.020, p = 0.002). Conclusion Urinary LAM serves as a dual-role biomarker, providing moderate diagnostic sensitivity and dynamic monitoring signals reflecting early bacillary response to therapy. The PreLAM+ΔLAM model enables early treatment response assessment for personalized therapy.