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Mantoux Test Information

The Mantoux test (also known as the Mantoux screening test, Tuberculin Sensitivity Test, Pirquet test, or PPD test for Purified Protein Derivative) is a diagnostic tool for tuberculosis. It is one of the two major tuberculin skin tests around the world, largely replacing multiple-puncture tests such as the Tine test. Until 2005, the Heaf test was used in the United Kingdom, but the Mantoux test is now used. The Mantoux test is endorsed by the American Thoracic Society and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)). It was also used in the USSR and is now prevalent in most of the former Soviet states.

Contents

History

Tuberculin is a glycerol extract of the tubercle bacillus. Purified protein derivative (PPD) tuberculin is a precipitate of non-species-specific molecules obtained from filtrates of sterilized, concentrated cultures. It was first described by Robert Koch in 1890. The test is named after Charles Mantoux, a French physician who built on the work of Koch and Clemens von Pirquet to create his test in 1907.

In 1939, M. A. Linnikova in the USSR created a modified version of PPD. In 1954, the Soviet Union started mass production of PPD-L, named after Linnikova.

Procedure

A standard dose of 5 Tuberculin units (0.1 mL)[1] (The standard Mantoux test in the UK consists of an intradermal injection of 2TU of Statens Serum Institute (SSI) tuberculin RT23 in 0.1ml solution for injection.)[2] is injected intradermally (between the layers of dermis) and read 48 to 72 hours later. This intradermal injection is termed the mantoux technique. A person who has been exposed to the bacteria is expected to mount an immune response in the skin containing the bacterial proteins.

The reaction is read by measuring the diameter of induration (palpable raised hardened area) across the forearm (perpendicular to the long axis) in millimeters. If there is no induration, the result should be recorded as "0 mm". Erythema (redness) should not be measured.

If a person has had a history of a positive tuberculin skin test, or had a recent tuberculin skin test (within one year), another skin test should be used.

Classification of tuberculin reaction

The results of this test must be interpreted carefully. The person's medical risk factors determine at which increment (5 mm, 10 mm, or 15 mm) of induration the result is considered positive.[3] A positive result indicates TB exposure.

A tuberculin test conversion is defined as an increase of 10 mm or more within a 2-year period, regardless of age.

False positive result

Due to the test's low specificity, most positive reactions in low-risk individuals are false-positives.[4] A false positive result may be caused by nontuberculous mycobacteria or previous administration of BCG vaccine. Prior vaccination with BCG may result in a false-positive result for many years afterwards.[5]

False positives can also occur when the injected area is touched, causing swelling and itching.

False negative result

Those that are immunologically compromised, especially those with HIV and low CD4 T cell counts, frequently show negative results from the PPD test. This is because the immune system needs to be functional to mount a response to the protein derivative injected under the skin.

BCG vaccine and the Mantoux test

There is disagreement about the role of Mantoux testing in people who have been vaccinated. The US recommendation is that tuberculin skin testing is not contraindicated for BCG-vaccinated persons and that prior BCG vaccination should not influence the interpretation of the test. The UK recommendation is that interferon-γ testing should be used to help interpret positive Mantoux tests, and that serial tuberculin skin testing must not be done in people who have had prior BCG vaccination. In general, the US recommendation results in a much larger number of people being falsely diagnosed with latent tuberculosis, while the UK approach probably misses patients with latent tuberculosis who should be treated.

According to the U. S. guidelines, latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) diagnosis and treatment for LTBI is considered for any BCG-vaccinated person whose skin test is 10 mm or greater, if any of these circumstances are present:

Anergy testing

In cases of anergy, a lack of reaction by the body's defence mechanisms when it comes into contact with foreign substances, the tuberculin reaction will occur weakly, thus compromising the value of Mantoux testing. For example, anergy is present in AIDS, a disease which strongly depresses the immune system. Therefore, anergy testing is advised in cases where suspicion is warranted that it is present. However, routine anergy skin testing is not recommended.[6]

Two-step testing

Some people who were previously infected with TB may have a negative reaction when tested years after infection, as the immune system response may gradually wane. This initial skin test, though negative, may stimulate (boost) the body's ability to react to tuberculin in future tests. Thus, a positive reaction to a subsequent test may be misinterpreted as a new infection, when in fact it is the result of the boosted reaction to an old infection.

Use two-step testing for initial skin testing of adults who will be retested periodically (e.g., health care workers). This ensures that any future positive tests can be interpreted as being caused by a new infection, rather than simply a reaction to an old infection.

A person who is diagnosed as "infected" on two-step testing is called a "tuberculin converter". The US recommendation that prior BCG-vaccination be ignored results in almost universal false diagnosis of tuberculosis infection in people who have had BCG (mostly foreign nationals).

Recent developments

As a replacement for the Mantoux test, several other tests are being developed. QuantiFERON-TB Gold is a blood test that measures the patient’s immune reactivity to the TB bacterium and is useful for initial and serial testing of persons with an increased risk of latent or active tuberculosis infection. Guidelines for the use of the QuantiFERON test were released by the CDC in December 2005.[8] QuantiFERON-TB Gold is Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved in the United States, has CE Mark approval in Europe and has been approved by the MHLW in Japan.

Heaf test

Main article: Heaf test

The Heaf test is a tuberculin skin test formerly used in the United Kingdom, but discontinued in 2005.

The equivalent Mantoux test positive levels done with 10 TU (0.1 mL 100 TU/mL, 1:1000) are

See also

References

  1. ^ DTBE - Mantoux TB Skin Test Faciliator Guide - Part 1: Administering
  2. ^ http://www.immunisation.nhs.uk/files/mantouxtest.pdf
  3. ^ From the CDC team of the CDC team at the Saskatchewan Lung Association, photos of a PPD bump.
  4. ^ Starke J (1996). "Tuberculosis Skin Testing: New Schools of Thought". Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics 98: 123–125. ISSN 0031-4005.
  5. ^ Chaturvedi N, Cockcroft A (1992). "Tuberculosis screening among health service employees: who needs chest X-rays?". J Soc Occup Med 42 (4): 179–82. doi:10.1093/occmed/42.4.179.
  6. ^ Tuberculin and Anergy Testing in HIV-Seropositive and HIV-Seronegative Persons - Markowitz et al. 119 (3): 185 - Annals of Internal Medicine
  7. ^ Office of Health and Human Services. "Booster Phenomenon". http://www.mass.gov/?pageID=eohhs2terminal&L=7&L0=Home&L1=Provider&L2=Guidelines+and+Resources&L3=Guidelines+for+Clinical+Treatment&L4=Diseases+%26+Conditions&L5=Tuberculosis+Prevention+and+Control&L6=Screening+and+Testing&sid=Eeohhs2&b=terminalcontent&f=dph_cdc_p_tb_testing_booster+&csid=Eeohhs2. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  8. ^ Guidelines for Using the QuantiFERON-TB Gold Test for Detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection, United States
Immune disorders: hypersensitivity and autoimmune diseases (279.5–6)
Type I/allergy/atopy (IgE)
Foreign Atopic dermatitis · Allergic urticaria · Hay fever · Allergic asthma · Anaphylaxis · Food allergy (Milk, Egg, Peanut, Tree nut, Seafood, Soy, Wheat), Penicillin allergy
Autoimmune none
Type II/ADCC (IgM, IgG)
Foreign Pernicious anemia · Hemolytic disease of the newborn
Autoimmune
Cytotoxic Autoimmune hemolytic anemia · Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura · Bullous pemphigoid · Pemphigus vulgaris · Rheumatic fever · Goodpasture's syndrome
"Type 5"/receptor Graves' disease · Myasthenia gravis
Type III (Immune complex)
Foreign Henoch–Schönlein purpura · Hypersensitivity vasculitis · Reactive arthritis · Farmer's lung · Post-streptococcal glomerulonephritis · Serum sickness · Arthus reaction
Autoimmune Systemic lupus erythematosus · Subacute bacterial endocarditis · Rheumatoid arthritis
Type IV/cell-mediated (T-cells)
Foreign Allergic contact dermatitis · Mantoux test
Autoimmune Diabetes mellitus type 1 · Hashimoto's thyroiditis · Guillain–Barré syndrome · Multiple sclerosis · Coeliac disease · Giant-cell arteritis
GVHD Transfusion-associated graft versus host disease
Unknown/ multiple
Foreign Hypersensitivity pneumonitis (Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis) · Transplant rejection · Latex allergy (I+IV)
Autoimmune Sjögren's syndrome · Autoimmune hepatitis · Autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome (APS1, APS2) · Autoimmune adrenalitis · Systemic autoimmune disease

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Tuberculosis
Treatment/ vaccines ATC code J04 · Isoniazid · 4-Aminosalicylic acid · Ethambutol · Capreomycin · Cycloserine · Rifampicin · Thioacetazone · Streptomycin · R207910 · RBCG30 · Pyrazinamide · MVA85A · Rifater
People/ History Manuel de Abreu · Hermann Brehmer · Albert Calmette · Philip D'Arcy Hart · Christopher Dye · George M. Heath · Max Gerson · F. R. G. Heaf · Robert Koch · Marcos Espinal · Friedrich Franz Friedmann · Charles Mantoux · Richard Morton · Edward Livingston Trudeau · Carl Rüedi · Lucius Rüedi · Mario Raviglione · Madonna Swan
Conditions/ symptoms/signs Caseous necrosis · Ghon focus/Ghon's complex · Giant multinucleated cell · Pott disease · Canga's bead symptom · Prosector's wart · Latent tuberculosis · Paronychia · Lupus vulgaris · Tuberculous lymphadenitis · Tuberculous meningitis · Miliary tuberculosis
Mycobacterium species Mycobacterium tuberculosis · Mycobacterium africanum · Mycobacterium bovis · Mycobacterium bovis BCG · Mycobacterium caprae
Type by resistance Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis · Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis
Tests/diagnosis Ziehl–Neelsen stain · Auramine phenol stain · Culture on Lowenstein-Jensen medium and/or MGIT · GeneXpert · Chest photofluorography · Tuberculin (Heaf test, Mantoux test, Tine test) · Interferon-γ release assays (QuantiFERON, T-SPOT.TB) · Microscopic Observation Drug Susceptibility assay
Organizations Adirondack Cottage Sanitarium · Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation · Friends of the Global Fight Against AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria · Glen Lake Children's Camp · Glen Lake Sanatorium · Glenn Dale Hospital · The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria · Global Plan to Stop Tuberculosis · Unitaid · TB Alliance · Seattle Biomedical Research Institute · Stop TB Partnership · Millennium Foundation · Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Structural Genomics Consortium · National Jewish Medical and Research Center · Phipps Institute for the Study, Treatment and Prevention of Tuberculosis · Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines · Cure Cottages of Saranac Lake · International Congress on Tuberculosis
Other/ungrouped 2007 tuberculosis scare · 72F fusion protein · Tuberculosis in popular culture · Baumgarten-Tangl law · CFP-10 · Tuberculosis in China · ESAT-6 · Iowa Cow War · List of tuberculosis victims · Plombage · Preventorium · Sanatorium · Sunshine Way · Tuberculosis classification · Tuberculosis radiology · Tygerberg score · World Tuberculosis Day

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