Date: December 5, 2024
Time: 9:00 AM (PST), 12:00 PM (EST)
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a disease of global significance, causing 1.3 million deaths and 10.6 million cases of active disease worldwide each year. The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified a global case detection gap of 3.1 million patients with undiagnosed cases predominantly occurring in high-TB-burden countries. Diagnostic delays in low- and middle-income settings are often many months and are associated with an increased risk of cavitary disease and sputum smear positivity, reflecting high infectiousness. TB control strategies are limited by currently available diagnostic, and diagnostic biomarkers capable of identifying people with infectious TB in high-burden settings, ideally at the point of care and not requiring sputum expectoration, are urgently needed. Using complementary proteomic approaches, including mass spectrometry and proximity extension assay, along with cross-disciplinary research and international collaboration, we have identified protein biomarkers with high TB-specificity and demonstrated the diagnostic performance of a six-protein diagnostic panel with the potential to be developed into a near-patient screening test.
Learning Objectives
- Explore a proteomics-based approach for discovering and potentially validating new diagnostic biomarkers.
- Learn about the clinical potential for new tuberculosis diagnostic biomarkers.
- Understand how Proximity Extension Assay and Mass Spectrometry can be used together in biomarker discovery and validation through the study case presented in the webinar.
Webinars will be available for unlimited on-demand viewing after live event.