Quantitative measures of humaninfection and their associations with tuberculosis disease progression andinfection.
Lisa Stockdale, Vivian Tamietti Martins, Gershim Asiki, Basil Sambou, Muhamed Sissoko, Uzochukwu Egere, Abdou Sillah, Beate Kampmann, et al. (11 authors)
Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences · 2025-11
Abstract
Interactions between human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and the host immune response to() may influence the risk of tuberculosis (TB) disease progression. Data on an association between HCMV and risk of initial infection withare lacking. In this correlation analysis, serological measures of HCMV were investigated in two cohorts: a TB case-control study nested within a Ugandan general population epidemiology cohort with serum samples from 25 TB disease cases up to 10 years prior to diagnosis, and a paediatricinfection study with 22 matched pairs of highly-TB-exposed children from The Gambia, where one of each pair was infected withand the other was not (as determined by a tubeculin skin test (TST)). Among individuals in the Ugandan case-control study, we found a relationship between odds of progression to active TB disease and (i) increased levels of HCMV IgM (odds ratio (OR) 2.5 (99% CI 0.84-7.54) for medium tertile, and OR 3.55 (1.27-9.96) for high tertile), (ii) HCMV IgG avidity (OR 2.82 (0.88-9.01) for medium and OR 3.08 (1.25-11.82) for high), and (iii) C-reactive protein (CRP) levels (OR 1.70 (0.58-5.00) for medium and OR 3.59 (1.20-10.74) for high tertile of response). Among Gambian children, no association was found between TB infection and measures of HCMV exposure. Further evaluation of such associations in larger prospective studies and experimental testing for a causal relationship are needed.This article is part of the discussion meeting issue 'The indirect effects of cytomegalovirus infection: mechanisms and consequences'.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Cytomegalovirus Infections
- Uganda
- Disease Progression
- Case-Control Studies
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Cytomegalovirus
- Gambia
- Tuberculosis
- Child, Preschool
- Female
- Child
- Male
- Infant
- Adolescent