Increased long-term central memory T cells in patients with retreatment pulmonary tuberculosis
Xin Yao, Haomin Cai, Jianxia Chen, Fangyong Yu, Xiaocui Wu, Yarong Shi, Yang Hu, Yuyan Xu, et al. (10 authors)
Frontiers in Immunology · 2025-03
Abstract
Background T cells are crucial in controlling Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection and disease progression. Nevertheless, the specific functions and changes of T lymphocyte subsets in retreatment tuberculosis remain poorly understand. The study aims to identify the changes in T lymphocyte subsets and the immunoprotective effect of T CM in retreatment tuberculosis. Method We collected venous blood from the participants and assessed using flow cytometry. Univariate analysis and regression model were used to evaluate the changes of T lymphocyte subsets and key subsets in retreatment tuberculosis. Results In the study, while the frequencies of CD4 and CD8 T cells were similar between primary and retreatment patients, retreatment patients exhibited a significant increase in T CM ( P < 0.05), which may represent a protective factor for retreatment (adjusted OR=0.926, 95%CI: 0.860-0.996, P < 0.05) (adjusted OR=0.951, 95%CI: 0.912-0.992, P <0.05). Furthermore, T CM significantly increased in retreatment patients who achieved cure ( P < 0.05), though were similar between the cure and no-cure for primary patients; The potentially protective effect of T CM in patients with repeated infection may possibly contribute by improving the efficacy of retreatment chemotherapy (adjusted OR=0.803, 95%CI: 0.677-0.953, P < 0.05) (adjusted OR=0.890, 95% CI: 0.812-0.976, P <0.05), particularly in those with lung injury (adjusted OR=0.780, 95% CI: 0.635-0.957, P < 0.05) (adjusted OR=0.805, 95% CI: 0.660-0.983, P <0.05). Conclusion Development of adjunct immunotherapies for increasing T CM responses may improve the efficacy of retreatment tuberculosis with existing and with novel chemotherapies.
MeSH terms
- Pulmonary tuberculosis
- Term (time)
- Medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Immunological memory
- Immunology