Urine metabolomic biomarkers linked to C-reactive protein-interleukin-6 axis in persons living with HIV and tuberculosis
Andréa Beltrami Doltrário, Myung Hee Lee, Steve Broll, Kathryn Dupnik, Vanessa Rouzier, Patrice Sévère, Nancy Dorvil, Jean W. Pape, et al. (11 authors)
medRxiv · 2025-08
Abstract
Diagnosing pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) remains challenging, particularly in people living with HIV (PLWH) who have a high rate of false-negative tests using expectorated sputum. Urine, a non-invasive sample, offers a valuable source of metabolites reflecting systemic changes in disease. This study utilized liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry to investigate urinary biomarkers previously identified in other cohorts, using a well-characterized population of people newly-diagnosed with HIV who screened positive for TB symptoms in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. In this study, we identified a urinary metabolomic signature associated with PTB in PLWH, confirming significant elevations of ureidopropionic acid, 3-hydroxykynurenine, and m/z 115.0498. Untargeted metabolomic analysis revealed a putative isoform of hydroxytryptophan and kynurenic acid as additional PTB-associated metabolites. Four of these five metabolites were also significantly elevated in serum when clinically and microbiologically combined PTB groups were analyzed. Serum metabolite levels correlated positively with elevated blood C-reactive protein (CRP) and IL-6, key inflammatory markers associated with PTB pathology. Moreover, the diagnostic performance of urinary metabolites in participants with CD4+T count below 200 cells/mm³ was not different from that of CRP. Urine metabolomic profiling may complement a patient-centered approach, providing a non-invasive means for TB biomarker discovery and investigating the immunometabolic processes underlying TB in PLWH.
MeSH terms
- Metabolomics
- Urine
- Medicine
- Metabolite
- Biomarker
- Tuberculosis
- Urinary system
- Metabolome
- Biomarker discovery
- Immunology
- Internal medicine
- Sputum
- Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
- C-reactive protein