Editor, – In their articles on BCG vaccination (Aust Prescr 2003;26:144-6), neither Professor Simpson nor Air Vice-Marshal Short mentioned the potential for tuberculosis control offered by modern tuberculosis-specific tests that are unaffected by BCG vaccination. T-cell mediated immune responses to the tuberculosis-specific proteins ESAT-6 and CFP-10 (proteins not present in BCG or environmental mycobacteria) have been shown to be effective in diagnosing tuberculosis infection in BCG-vaccinated individuals.1,2
Unfortunately, despite intense interest in the literature, the use of tuberculosis-specific antigens in diagnostics has to date been limited by the complexity of the methodologies required to measure T-cell responses. Most methods require T-cell purification, counting, and culture, which are expensive and not suited for reproducible, robust diagnosis. However, the whole blood test, QuantiFERON-TB Gold, has now been released in Australia, after extensive testing overseas found it to have high specificity and sensitivity.
The Australian Defence Force may also note the US Centers for Disease Control endorses QuantiFERON-TB testing in the military.3 QuantiFERON testing detects significantly more active, infectious tuberculosis cases than Mantoux testing.4 The elimination of the confounding factors of BCG vaccination and sensitisation to non-tuberculous mycobacteria makes the test an even more valuable diagnostic tool.
Tony Radford
Chief Executive Officer/Managing Director
Cellestis Ltd.
Melbourne
(Cellestis are manufacturers of QuantiFERON products)