Early Mycobacterial Antigens in the Immunodiagnosis of Latent Tuberculosis Infection.
Aigul Utegenova, Lazzat Kassayeva, Bayan Turdalina, Aliya Baiduissenova, Ayaz Yktiyarov, Marat Dusmagambetov, Evgeni Sokurenko
Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland) · 2026-02
Abstract
Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) represents a major global health concern as it constitutes the principal reservoir for future tuberculosis (TB) disease. Its identification is particularly important in Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG)-vaccinated populations, where cross-reactivity of purified protein derivative limits the specificity of the tuberculin skin test and hampers targeted preventive therapy. Earlyantigens encoded within the RD1 region, especially ESAT-6, CFP-10 and TB7.7, have enabled the development of antigen-specific interferon-gamma release assays (IGRAs) and recombinant skin tests with improved BCG-independent specificity. This narrative review integrates and critically appraises current evidence on the immunobiological properties of early and latency-associated antigens, the cellular mechanisms underlying T-cell-dependent immune reactivity, and the diagnostic performance of IGRAs and ESAT-6/CFP-10-based skin tests, rather than merely summarizing individual studies. Although these platforms rely on different assay principles (in vitro cytokine release versus in vivo delayed-type hypersensitivity), both measure antigen-specific T-cell memory and do not define the biological stage of infection or reliably distinguish latent from incipient or active TB. Across most adult populations, IGRAs demonstrate high specificity and acceptable sensitivity, whereas reduced sensitivity and higher rates of indeterminate results are observed in young children and immunocompromised individuals. ESAT-6/CFP-10-based skin tests show diagnostic accuracy comparable to IGRAs and may offer operational advantages in resource-limited settings. Latency-associated antigens and host biomarkers such as IP-10, together with multi-analyte immune signatures, represent promising avenues for improving diagnostic sensitivity and prognostic stratification but currently lack sufficient validation for routine clinical use. Overall, RD1-encoded antigens remain central to LTBI immunodiagnosis, while future research should focus on developing stage-resolving and prognostic biomarkers, optimized antigen panels, and standardized interpretive frameworks.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Antigens, Bacterial
- Latent Tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Immunologic Tests
- Interferon-gamma Release Tests
- Bacterial Proteins