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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2002, p. 344-347, Vol. 9, No. 2
1071-412X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.9.2.344-347.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Immunocytochemical Method for Early Laboratory Diagnosis of Tuberculous Meningitis
M. G. Sumi,1 A. Mathai,1 S. Reuben,1 C. Sarada,2 and V. V. Radhakrishnan1*
Departments of Pathology,1
Neurology, Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology, Thiruvananthapuram 695011, Kerala State, India2
Received 6 June 2001/
Returned for modification 14 August 2001/
Accepted 30 October 2001

ABSTRACT
A simple immunocytochemical method was standardized for the
direct demonstration of mycobacterial antigen in cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF) specimens of patients with tuberculous meningitis
(TBM). CSF-cytospin smears were prepared from 22 patients with
a clinical diagnosis of TBM and also from an equal number of
patients with nontuberculous neurological diseases (disease
control). Immunocytological demonstration of mycobacterial antigens
in the cytoplasm of monocytoid cells was attempted, by using
rabbit immunoglobulin G to
Mycobacterium tuberculosis as the
primary antibody. Of the 22 CSF-cytospin smears from TBM patients,
16 showed positive immunostaining, while all of the CSF-cytospin
smears from the disease control showed negative immunostaining
for mycobacterial antigen. The technical aspects of this immunocytological
method for the demonstration of mycobacterial antigens are simple,
rapid, and reproducible, as well as specific, and therefore
can be applied for the early diagnosis of TBM, particularly
in patients in whom bacteriological methods did not demonstrate
the presence of
M. tuberculosis in the CSF.

INTRODUCTION
A confirmatory ("gold standard") laboratory diagnosis of tuberculous
meningitis (TBM) depends upon the demonstration of the causative
agent of the disease, i.e.,
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, in the
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimens by bacteriological methods
such as Ziehl-Neelsen staining and cultures. The acid-fast bacilli
are seldom demonstrated in CSF smears. The culture methods are
not only time-consuming but also less sensitive. In an earlier
study we reported that lumbar CSF samples contain fewer
M. tuberculosis bacilli than does cisternal and ventricular CSF in patients
with TBM (
9). However, for the routine bacteriological studies,
cisternal and ventricular CSF cannot be obtained since these
procedures can sometimes lead to fatal consequences; thus; CSF
samples are usually collected from the lumbar region in patients
with TBM. Because of the catastrophic nature of the disease
and because effective as well as specific chemotherapy is available
for this potentially curable infectious disease, clinicians
cannot delay antituberculosis treatment (ATT) while waiting
for a confirmatory bacteriological diagnosis of TBM. It is also
well recognized that early diagnosis and institution of appropriate
treatment in a patient with TBM will lead to complete neurological
recovery, whereas a delay in diagnosis and treatment often leads
to irreversible neurological sequelae.
During the past two decades several biochemical (3, 6, 7), immunological (1, 2, 5, 8, 11), and molecular biological methods (4) have been described as an adjunct for the laboratory diagnosis of TBM. All of these studies are aimed at the analysis of CSF and measure either the host response to infection or the breakdown products of M. tuberculosis bacilli. In the present study, a simple immunocytochemical method was devised to demonstrate mycobacterial antigens in the cytoplasm of monocytoid cells (macrophages) in the CSF of patients with TBM. This was attempted by using rabbit immunoglobulin G (IgG) to M. tuberculosis as the primary antibody. The specificity of this immunocytochemical method was critically assessed in the CSF-cytospin smears of patients with nontuberculous neurological diseases and the sensitivity of the assay has been evaluated in CSF culture-proven patients with TBM. We consider this newer approach for the laboratory diagnosis of TBM to be unique; it can be easily performed in any routine clinical laboratory and therefore is best suited to the laboratories in developing countries where laboratory resources are limited.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
The Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology
(referred to here as "the Insitute"), located in the Kerala
State, is the major tertiary referral center for neurological
diseases in Thiruvananthapuram, India. In 2000, 22 patients
with a clinical diagnosis of TBM were referred to the Insitute
from several outlying hospitals in the Kerala State. Prior to
admission, most of these patients (20 of 22) had received ATT
for periods ranging between 2 and 7 weeks (rifampin at 450 mg,
isoniazid at 300 mg, streptomycin at 500 mg, and ethambutol
at 50 mg daily). At the Insitute, the diagnosis of TBM in these
patients is based on relevant clinical features such as neck
rigidity, positive Kernig's sign, and compatible neuroradiological
evidences of basal exudates in magnetic resonance image scans.
None of these patients had clinical or radiological evidence
of tuberculosis in the lungs. At the Insitute, CSF analysis
is one of the laboratory investigations performed in the management
of patients with meningitis. CSF obtained from the lumbar region
was collected from all of these patients and was analyzed by
routine cytological, biochemical, microbiological, and immunological
methods.
The biochemical parameters in all of the CSF samples showed elevated protein (70 to 900 mg/100 ml) and reduced glucose concentration (10 to 30 mg/100 ml). A cytospin (Cytopro; Wescor, USA) was used for the CSF cytological studies. Three cytospin smears from each CSF sample were prepared. One smear was stained with hematoxylin and eosin and then examined by microscopy. Of 22 CSF smears from TBM patients, 16 showed a mixture of lymphocytes, plasmacytoid lymphocytes, and monocytoid cells. The number of monocytoid cells ranged between 10 to 65 in individual CSF-cytospin smears. In six TBM patients, the CSF-cytospin smear showed only occasional lymphocytes and monocytoid cells were not present. The second cytospin smear from each of the 22 TBM patients was fixed in cold acetone and used for immunocytological studies. M. tuberculosis was isolated in the CSF samples from 3 of 22 TBM patients by culture and, in 19 patients, the CSF cultures were repeated twice but they did not grow M. tuberculosis. Acid-fast bacilli were not demonstrated in any of the 22 CSF smears by the Ziehl-Neelsen staining method. CSF specimens from 22 patients with nontuberculous neurological diseases were selected as disease controls. The 22 patients in the disease control group were grouped as follows: 5 had bacterial meningitis due to Haemophilus influenzae (n = 3) or Nisseria meningitidis (n = 2), 5 had partially treated pyogenic meningitis, 2 had cryptococcal meningitis, and 10 had chronic meningitis. The CSF samples from the disease control were similarly subjected to cytological, biochemical, microbiological, and immunocytological analyses. The CSF samples from the disease control group also showed elevated proteins (60 to 750 mg/100 ml) and reduced glucose concentrations (5 to 30 mg/100 ml). The CSF-cytospin smears in the disease control group showed a mixture of neutrophils, lymphocytes, and monocytoid cells in 18 of 22 CSF-cytospin smears. The number of monocytoid cells in the patients ranged between 0 to 8 cells. In four patients, CSF-cytospin smears showed only a few lymphocytes (<10/mm3) and no monocytoid cells.
Immunocytochemical method for the demonstration of mycobacterial antigens.
The cytospin smears from the TBM and disease control groups were simultaneously stained by the immunocytological method to demonstrate the presence of mycobacterial antigens. Briefly, the acetone-fixed CSF smears were washed several times with 0.05 M Tris-buffered saline with Tween 20 (pH 7.6) (TBS-T). CSF-cytospin smears were then treated with 3% H2O2 for 5 min and washed thrice in 0.05 M TBS-T. Smears were then incubated with primary antibody (20 µg of polyvalent rabbit IgG to M. tuberculosis/ml [10]) for 1 h at 37°C. Subsequently, the smears were incubated with the anti-rabbit IgG-biotin conjugate and streptavidin horseradish peroxidase (Dako LSAB2 System) for 45 min each at room temperature. After that, the smears were washed thoroughly with TBS-T. Smears were then incubated for 10 min at room temperature in a substrate, consisting of diaminobenzidine tetrachloride (10 mg dissolved in 5 ml of 0.05 M TBS-T and 5 ml of 3% H2O2). Finally, the smears were counterstained with Harris hematoxylin, dehydrated, cleared in xylene, mounted in Permount (Sigma Chemical Co.), and visualized under a microscope.

RESULTS
Of 22 CSF-cytospin smears from TBM patients, 16 showed a mixture
of lymphocytes and monocytoid cells (Fig.
1). Approximately,
15% monocytoid cells and lymphocytes showed degenerative changes
in their cytoplasm. All of the well-preserved monocytes in the
smear showed positive immunostaining for mycobacterial antigens
in the form of brownish red granules in the cytoplasm (Fig.
2). About 70 to 80% of monocytoid cells in the smears showed
positive immunostaining or mycobacterial antigens. Besides this,
aggregates of immunostained extracellular brownish material
was also seen in the smears. In six CSF smears of TBM patients,
the immunostaining was negative because in these cases the smears
showed only a few lymphocytes. Positive immunobinding in the
monocytoid cells was also seen in the three TBM CSF samples
in which
M. tuberculosis was isolated by culture. In order to
evaluate the reproducibility of the assay, immunostaining was
repeated on the third CSF-cytospin smear in the same patient.
There was no variation in the immunostaining pattern. All of
the 22 patients received ATT based on the results of the immunocytochemical
staining. A total of 16 patients had optimal neurological recovery,
and in 6 patients the neurological recovery was suboptimal.
None of these CSF-cytospin smears from the patients in the disease
control group showed positive immunostaining, indicating that
nonspecific immunostaining did not occur by this technique.

DISCUSSION
TBM is a potentially curable infectious disease of the CNS,
and thus there is a need to design an alternative diagnostic
method to the conventional microbiological method for the early
laboratory diagnosis of TBM so that an effective therapeutic
modality can be instituted quickly in patients with TBM. To
meet the above objective, we devised a simple immunocytological
method. The fundamental principle of this assay is that the
CSF in patients with TBM during active stages of the disease
contains monocytoid cells (macrophages) and lymphocytes. The
function of these monocytes is to phagocytose the tubercle bacilli
and process the antigenic component of the bacilli. Thus, the
cytoplasm of the monocytes in patients with TBM during the active
stages contain mycobacterial antigen. The presence of mycobacterial
antigens in these monocytes has been demonstrated by an immunocytochemical
method in this study. We used rabbit IgG to
M. tuberculosis as the primary antibody to demonstrate mycobacterial antigens
in the CSF smears.Of 22 CSF-cytospin smears from patients with
TBM, 16 showed positive immunostaining, while cytospin smears
from 6 TBM patients yielded negative immunostaining because
there was a paucity of monocytoid cells in these CSF smears.
There was no false-positive immunostaining in the CSF smears
from the disease control group.
Earlier immunoassays described in the literature for the detection of mycobacterial antigen in the CSF of patients with TBM include the latex agglutination test with anti-plasma membrane antibody (5), a sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with anti-BCG antibody (12), and an inhibition ELISA with polyvalent antibody against M. tuberculosis (2). In our earlier study, we also used a Dot-Iba to detect a 14-kDa mycobacterial antigen in the CSF of patients with TBM (13). The goal of these earlier studies was to detect the circulating mycobacterial antigens in the CSF of patients with TBM. In the present study, however, we have demonstrated the presence of mycobacterial antigens in the monocytoid cells instead of the CSF. This method carries a sensitivity of 72.5% (16 of 22) and a specificity of 100%. The technical part of the assay is much more simple than the methodology described in earlier studies. The result of this assay can be easily visualized under the microscope and can be obtained within 5 h of the receipt of CSF samples in the laboratory. The presence of an adequate number of monocytoid cells (>5/high-power field) in the CSF is essential for immunostaining, and this should be ascertained in the intimal hematoxylin-and-eosin-stained smear. A positive result obtained by this immunocytological method has potential diagnostic application in patients with TBM. Hitherto, a similar study has not been described in the literature. We therefore consider this newer diagnostic approach to have potential application for the laboratory diagnosis of TBM, particularly in patients for whom bacteriological methods did not confirm the diagnosis.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank the Director of the Insitute for the kind permission
to publish the article.
This study received support from the Department of Science and Technology, New Delhi, India (SP/SO/B-94), and the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi, India.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Pathology, Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology, Thiruvananthapuram 695011, Kerala State, India. Phone: 91-471-524508/94. Fax: 91-491-4464433. E-mail:
vvr{at}sctimst.ker.nic.in.


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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2002, p. 344-347, Vol. 9, No. 2
1071-412X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.9.2.344-347.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.