| Literature DB >> 27906977 |
Bo Wei1, Lei Chen1, Miho Kibukawa1, John Kang2, Hetty Waskin3, Matthew Marton4.
Abstract
Chagas disease is caused by the parasitic infection of Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi). The STOP CHAGAS clinical trial was initiated in 2011 to evaluate posaconazole in treating Chagas disease, with treatment success defined as negative qualitative PCR results of detecting the parasites in blood specimens collected post-treatment. PAXgene Blood DNA tubes were utilized as a simple procedure to collect and process blood specimens. However, the PAXgene blood specimens challenged published T. cruzi PCR methods, resulting in poor sensitivity and reproducibility. To accurately evaluate the treatment efficacy of the clinical study, we developed and validated a robust PCR assay for detecting low level T. cruzi in PAXgene blood specimens. The assay combines a new DNA extraction method with a custom designed qPCR assay, resulting in limit of detection of 0.005 and 0.01 fg/μl for K98 and CL Brener, two representative strains of two of T. cruzi's discrete typing units. Reliable qPCR standard curves were established for both strains to measure parasite loads, with amplification efficiency ≥ 90% and the lower limit of linearity ≥ 0.05 fg/μl. The assay successfully analyzed the samples collected from the STOP CHAGAS study and may prove useful for future global clinical trials evaluating new therapies for asymptomatic chronic Chagas disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27906977 PMCID: PMC5131911 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Consistent and High DNA Extraction Efficiency of Quick-gDNA MiniPrep Kit with Clinical PAXgene Blood Samples.
The 50% and 150% lines are the lower and upper limits of acceptable values for DNA extraction efficiency.
Fig 2Effect of Addition of Genomic Lysis Buffer to PAXgene Blood on T. cruzi kDNA qPCR Ct Variability.
Increasing percentage of Genomic Lysis Buffer was added to 5 ml of PAXgene blood. 50% v/v of lysis buffer was sufficient to reduce Ct variability caused by sampling error of individual 0.2ml aliquots of un-lysed PAXgene blood.
Fig 3Improving T. cruzi kDNA qPCR Assay Sensitivity with Version 2 Assay TaqMan Probe.
Fig 3A: Comparison of Version 1 and Version 2 probe with 20 fg/μl of CL Brener; Fig 3B: 20 fg/μl of K98 (each DNA sample having four qPCR technical replicates)
Improvement in Sensitivity of T. cruzi qPCR Assay in Terms of LOD
| Representative Strain | LOD of Version 1 Assay | LOD of Version 2 Assay | Increase in Assay Sensitivity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| K98 | 1 PPM (0.2 fg/μl) | 0.025 PPM (0.005 fg/μl) | 39x | |
| CL Brener | 1 PPM (0.2 fg/μl) | 0.05 PPM (0.01 fg/μl) | 19x |
* Version 1 Assay: LOD established by CRO; Used in Patient Enrollment Screening of the STOP CHAGAS Study
** Version 2 Assay: Used in Evaluating Treatment Response of the STOP CHAGAS Study
Established T. cruzi kDNA qPCR Standard Curve Formulas of the Version 2 Assay
| T. cruzi Strain | Formula with “y” in Ct unit | PCR Amplification Efficiency | R2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| y = -1.078 x log2(PPM) + 33.26 | 95.3% | 0.999 | |
| y = -1.035 x log2(PPM) + 31.75 | 90.2% | 0.995 |
Fig 4Confirming Accuracy of Established T. cruzi kDNA qPCR Standard Curves with NHV PAXgene Blood Samples Spiked with Known Concentrations of T. cruzi DNA.
Fig 4A: CL Brener; Fig 4B: K98; with 3 PAXgene blood samples per concentration per T. cruzi strain
Accuracy and Precision of Version 2 T. cruzi kDNA qPCR Assay
| Spike-in | Measured | CV% of Measured | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | 124.2 | 5.9 | |
| 10 | 10.3 | 8.4 | |
| 1 | 1.00 | 23.8 | |
| 0.25 | 0.19 | 22.6 | |
| 100 | 141.0 | 14.1 | |
| 10 | 12.3 | 22.6 | |
| 1 | 0.98 | 26.6 | |
| 0.25 | 0.19 | 41.7 |
QC Parameters, Acceptable Values, and Final Results of Analysis of Clinical Samples Collected from the Randomized Patients of the STOP CHAGAS Study
| Experimental Steps | QC Parameters | Acceptable Values | Results from Clinical Sample Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative PAXgene Blood Control | ≤1 detectable Ct value in all 12 replicates of kDNA qPCR assay | All runs had no detectable Ct and passed. | |
| DNA Extraction Efficiency | 50 to 150% | All samples passed. | |
| DNA Extraction of 0.25 PPM Positive PAXgene Blood Control | Within each of the 3 quad-replicates, at least 2 replicates had detectable Ct. | For K98, all runs had 100% detectable Cts in quad-replicates and passed. | |
| For CL Brener, 6% of the runs had 3 detectable Cts in quad-replicates, and the rest had all 4 detectable Cts. All runs passed. | |||
| DNA Extraction of 1 PPM Positive PAXgene Blood Control | Within each of the 3 quad-replicates of kDNA PCR assay, at least 3 replicates had detectable Ct. | For K98, all runs had all 4 detectable Cts in quad-replicates. All runs passed. | |
| For CL Brener, 2% of the runs with 3 detectable Cts in quad-replicates, the rest all 4 detectable Cts. All runs passed. | |||
| 10 PPM DNA Positive Control | For K98: mean Ct between 27.99 and 29.27 | All runs passed. | |
| For CL Brener: mean Ct between 29.43 and 30.68 | All runs passed. | ||
| NTC Negative Control | ≤ 1 detectable Ct value in all 12 replicates of kDNA qPCR | All runs had no detectable Ct and passed. |
Please note that for negative controls, we utilized “≤ 1” instead of “<1” as acceptance values, even though we did not see any amplification (Ct < 45) in negative control samples during clinical analysis. However, the acceptance values were established during assay validation, in which a couple of negative samples had 1 amplification with Ct > 35 among the 12 replicates.