| Literature DB >> 27278716 |
Boon-Teong Teoh1, Sing-Sin Sam1, Kim-Kee Tan1, Jefree Johari1, Juraina Abd-Jamil1, Poh-Sim Hooi1, Sazaly AbuBakar1.
Abstract
Timely and accurate dengue diagnosis is important for differential diagnosis and immediate implementation of appropriate disease control measures. In this study, we compared the usefulness and applicability of NS1 RDT (NS1 Ag Strip) and qRT-PCR tests in complementing the IgM ELISA for dengue diagnosis on single serum specimen (n = 375). The NS1 Ag Strip and qRT-PCR showed a fair concordance (κ = 0.207, p = 0.001). While the NS1 Ag Strip showed higher positivity than qRT-PCR for acute (97.8% vs. 84.8%) and post-acute samples (94.8% vs. 71.8%) of primary infection, qRT-PCR showed higher positivity for acute (58.1% vs. 48.4%) and post-acute (50.0% vs.41.4%) samples in secondary infection. IgM ELISA showed higher positivity in samples from secondary dengue (74.2-94.8%) than in those from primary dengue (21.7-64.1%). More primary dengue samples showed positive with combined NS1 Ag Strip/IgM ELISA (99.0% vs. 92.8%) whereas more secondary samples showed positive with combined qRT-PCR/IgM ELISA (99.4% vs. 96.2%). Combined NS1 Ag Strip/IgM ELISA is a suitable combination tests for timely and accurate dengue diagnosis on single serum specimen. If complemented with qRT-PCR, combined NS1 Ag Strip/IgM ELISA would improve detection of secondary dengue samples.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27278716 PMCID: PMC4899743 DOI: 10.1038/srep27663
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Summary of dengue detection in serum samples from clinically dengue-suspected patients at UMMC using qRT-PCR, NS1 Ag Strip, IgM and IgG ELISA.
| Assays | Results | IgM ELISA | IgG ELISA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive (n = 195) | Negative (n = 180) | Positive (n = 188 | Negative (n = 187) | ||
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
| qRT-PCR | Positive (n = 160) | 96 (25.6) | 64 (17.1) | 85 (22.7) | 75 (20.0) |
| Negative (n = 215) | 99 (26.4) | 116 (30.9) | 103 (27.5) | 112 (29.8) | |
| NS1 Ag Strip | Positive (n = 162) | 97 (25.9) | 65 (17.3) | 69 (18.4) | 93 (24.8) |
| Negative (n = 213) | 98 (26.1) | 115 (30.7) | 119 (31.7) | 94 (25.1) | |
aOut of 375 sera, acute DENV infection was confirmed in 267 samples by qRT-PCR, NS1 Ag Strip and/or anti-DENV IgM ELISA.
bOne hundred and eighteen anti-DENV IgG positive samples tested positive by qRT-PCR or NS1 Ag Strip.
cForty-one anti-DENV IgG positive samples obtained within 10 days of illness tested positive by anti-DENV IgM ELISA alone.
dEighteen anti-DENV IgG positive samples tested negative by anti-DENV IgM ELISA, NS1 Ag Strip and qRT-PCR.
Figure 1Flow chart of selection and exclusion of samples for analyses.
Figure 2Comparison of the performance of various dengue diagnostic methods against laboratory-confirmed dengue samples according to the day of illness.
Figure 3Comparison of the performance of qRT-PCR, NS1 Ag Strip and IgM ELISA assays against acute and post-acute dengue samples in primary and secondary DENV infection.
The test sensitivities between primary and secondary infection were compared using Chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test (two-tailed). Significant differences (p < 0.01) of test sensitivities between primary and secondary infection were obtained for all tests.
Figure 4Sensitivity of various dengue diagnostic methods against laboratory-confirmed dengue samples in primary and secondary DENV infection.
The test sensitivities among groups were compared using McNemar’s exact test (two-tailed). The sensitivities of combined NS1 Ag Strip/IgM ELISA and combined qRT-PCR/IgM ELISA tests were significant higher (p < 0.01) than those of individual tests.