| Literature DB >> 24989600 |
Tomoki Yoshikawa1, Shuetsu Fukushi1, Hideki Tani1, Aiko Fukuma1, Satoshi Taniguchi2, Shoichi Toda3, Yukie Shimazu4, Koji Yano5, Toshiharu Morimitsu6, Katsuyuki Ando7, Akira Yoshikawa8, Miki Kan9, Nobuyuki Kato10, Takumi Motoya11, Tsuyoshi Kuzuguchi12, Yasuhiro Nishino13, Hideo Osako14, Takahiro Yumisashi15, Kouji Kida16, Fumie Suzuki17, Hirokazu Takimoto18, Hiroaki Kitamoto19, Ken Maeda20, Toru Takahashi21, Takuya Yamagishi22, Kazunori Oishi22, Shigeru Morikawa23, Masayuki Saijo1, Masayuki Shimojima24.
Abstract
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging infectious disease with a high case fatality risk and is caused by the SFTS virus (SFTSV). A retrospective study conducted after the first identification of an SFTS patient in Japan revealed that SFTS is endemic to the region, and the virus exists indigenously in Japan. Since the nucleotide sequence of Japanese SFTSV strains contains considerable differences compared with that of Chinese strains, there is an urgent need to establish a sensitive and specific method capable of detecting the Chinese and Japanese strains of SFTSV. A conventional one-step reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) (cvPCR) method and a quantitative one-step RT-PCR (qPCR) method were developed to detect the SFTSV genome. Both cvPCR and qPCR detected a Chinese SFTSV strain. Forty-one of 108 Japanese patients suspected of having SFTS showed a positive reaction by cvPCR. The results from the samples of 108 Japanese patients determined by the qPCR method were in almost complete agreement with those determined by cvPCR. The analyses of the viral copy number level in the patient blood samples at the acute phase determined by qPCR in association with the patient outcome confirmed that the SFTSV RNA load in the blood of the nonsurviving patients was significantly higher than that of the surviving patients. Therefore, the cvPCR and qPCR methods developed in this study can provide a powerful means for diagnosing SFTS. In addition, the detection of the SFTSV genome level by qPCR in the blood of the patients at the acute phase may serve as an indicator to predict the outcome of SFTS.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24989600 PMCID: PMC4313158 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.00742-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948