| Literature DB >> 27920571 |
Michael J Cook1, Basant K Puri2.
Abstract
The clinical diagnosis of Lyme borreliosis can be supported by various test methodologies; test kits are available from many manufacturers. Literature searches were carried out to identify studies that reported characteristics of the test kits. Of 50 searched studies, 18 were included where the tests were commercially available and samples were proven to be positive using serology testing, evidence of an erythema migrans rash, and/or culture. Additional requirements were a test specificity of ≥85% and publication in the last 20 years. The weighted mean sensitivity for all tests and for all samples was 59.5%. Individual study means varied from 30.6% to 86.2%. Sensitivity for each test technology varied from 62.4% for Western blot kits, and 62.3% for enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay tests, to 53.9% for synthetic C6 peptide ELISA tests and 53.7% when the two-tier methodology was used. Test sensitivity increased as dissemination of the pathogen affected different organs; however, the absence of data on the time from infection to serological testing and the lack of standard definitions for "early" and "late" disease prevented analysis of test sensitivity versus time of infection. The lack of standardization of the definitions of disease stage and the possibility of retrospective selection bias prevented clear evaluation of test sensitivity by "stage". The sensitivity for samples classified as acute disease was 35.4%, with a corresponding sensitivity of 64.5% for samples from patients defined as convalescent. Regression analysis demonstrated an improvement of 4% in test sensitivity over the 20-year study period. The studies did not provide data to indicate the sensitivity of tests used in a clinical setting since the effect of recent use of antibiotics or steroids or other factors affecting antibody response was not factored in. The tests were developed for only specific Borrelia species; sensitivities for other species could not be calculated.Entities:
Keywords: 2 tier test; ELISA test; Western Blot; test sensitivity; test specificity; two-tier test
Year: 2016 PMID: 27920571 PMCID: PMC5125990 DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S122313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Gen Med ISSN: 1178-7074
Studies included in the analysis
| Study | Year | Patient enrollment | Disease stage | Test | Mean of subgroup positives | Subgroup sample size | Sens | Spec | Number of test kits | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacon et al | 2003 | CDC | All | Two-tier | 186.3 | 280 | 66% | 99% | 8 | Multiple samples from some subjects. Only IgM result included. IgG sensitivity was 31%. |
| Klempner et al | 2001 | CDC | Chronic | WB IgG | 14.0 | 21 | 67% | 100% | 1 | |
| Mogilyansky et al | 2004 | CDC panel | All | WB | 14.3 | 18 | 79% | 89% | 7 | C6 data excluded with specificity of 73%. |
| Tilton et al | 1997 | CDC panel | All | WB | 30.7 | 46 | 67% | Note 1 | 6 | Test runs with low specificity (60.0%, 68.2%) excluded. |
| Smit et al | 2015 | Seropositive | All | IgM/IgG | 8.5 | 21 | 40% | 99% | 4 | |
| Branda et al | 2010 | CDC/EM | All | EIA/WB/two-tier | 28.2 | 45 | 69% | 98% | 3 | |
| Wormser et al | 2012 | EM and/or seropositive | EM | Two-tier | 83.0 | 158 | 53% | 99% | 5 | Only two-tier results included. ELISA test “indeterminate” was included with “positive” results for WB. |
| Dessau | 2013 | CSF positive | Neuroborreliosis | ELISA | 37.0 | 48 | 69% | 97% | 2 | CSF-positive samples. IgG data only used. |
| Branda et al | 2013 | EM/culture/seropositive | All | ELISA, C6, WB | 51.3 | 64 | 80% | 99% | 8 | Data for European samples tested with US B31 test kits not included |
| Goossens et al | 1999 | EM | EM | ELISA, WB | 13.9 | 26 | 48% | 88% | 15 | Only IgM result included. IgG sensitivity was lower at 16% |
| Johnson et al | 1996 | EM | All | Two-tier | 37.1 | 58 | 64% | 96% | 2 | Only two-tier study included. See excluded studies. |
| Tjernberg et al | 2007 | EM | Acute | ELISA, C6 | 55.8 | 158 | 35% | 87% | 3 | |
| Trevejo et al | 1999 | EM | All | Two-tier | 37.0 | 121 | 31% | 100% | 3 | |
| Binnicker et al | 2008 | EM and/or culture | All | WB IgM | 16.3 | 28 | 58% | 95% | 4 | |
| Gomes-Solecki et al | 2002 | EM and culture positive | EM | ELISA | 56.0 | 65 | 86% | 100% | 2 | Only commercial test included and only samples with clear definition of status of sample. |
| Marangoni et al | 2005 | Culture | EM | ELISA, C6 | 27.7 | 45 | 40% | 90% | 5 | Data are for samples at enrollment. Follow-up data not included. |
| Marangoni et al | 2008 | Culture | All | ELISA | 44.0 | 66 | 67% | 97% | 4 | |
| Porwancher et al | 2011 | Culture | All | All | 45.3 | 80 | 57% | 96% | 4 | Best-case WB and two-tier selected. |
Notes: Enrollment criteria – CDC: samples met CDC criteria; EM rash and/or seropositive: using a two-tier test with approved test kits; EM: samples from patients with documentation of EM rash in clinical records; culture: samples were positive using culture and microscopy; CDC panel: samples obtained from the CDC and certified to meet the criteria defined.
Abbreviations: sens, weighted mean test sensitivity; spec, test specificity; WB, Western blot; EM, erythema migrans; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; EIA, immunofluorescence assay; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; C6, synthetic C6 peptide ELISA.
Studies not meeting inclusion criteria
| Study | Year | Patient enrollment | Disease stage | Test | Sens | Spec | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ang et al | 2011 | Clinical | All | ELISA, VlsE, C6 | 44% | 86% | Samples from patients with suspected Lyme disease. |
| Burbelo et al | 2010 | Clinical | All | VOVO, C6, ELISA | 98% | 99% | In-house developed test. |
| Busson et al | 2012 | All | ELISA, WB, two-tier | 98% | 91% | Samples from patients with suspected Lyme disease. Duplicate samples from patients. Kits supplied by manufacturers. | |
| Coulter et al | 2005 | Suspected | All | ELISA | 45%–72% | ND | No specificity data. Study of culture sensitivity and algorithm using culture plus PC. |
| Craven et al | 1996 | CDC | All | ELISA/WB | 57%–100% | 71%–98% | In-house tests. Work carried out in 1992, tests not commercially available. Interlaboratory study. Cross-reactive samples not used for some specificity characterization. |
| Dessau et al | 2010 | Clinical | All | ELISA local antigens | 9.2% | ND | Data are best-case IgM tests. IgG was lower sensitivity, specificity was 98%. |
| Engstrom et al | 1995 | EM documented | Early and EM | In house | 43% | 97% | Test development. |
| Eshoo et al | 2012 | EM/CDC | All | PCR/EIS-MS | 62% | 100% | PCR ESI-MS. |
| Goettner | 2005 | EM | Early | Western blot | 81% | 99% | In-house developed test. |
| Heikkilä et al | 2003 | Seropositive | Arthritis | ELISA | 37%–96% | ND | Results from experiments with eleven different antigens. |
| Johnson et al | 1996 | Clinical | All | Culture/two-tier | 81% | 90% | Possible sample bias described by authors. |
| Koidl et al | 2013 | Clinical | All | IgM | 32% | ND | Samples from patients with suspected Lyme disease. |
| Lawrenz et al | 1999 | All | EM | ELISA | 70% | 98% | In-house developed test. |
| Liang et al | 1999 | Seropositive | All | C6 | 89% | 99% | In-house developed test. |
| Liang et al | 2000 | All | All | C6 | 84% | 99% | In-house developed test. |
| Liu et al | 2013 | All | All | ELISA, WIB | 67% | 94% | In-house developed test. |
| Nordberg et al | 2012 | Well characterised | Neuroborreliosis | Elispot | 36% | 82% | Samples from patients with suspected Lyme disease. |
| Nowakowski et al | 2001 | EM/CDC | EM | Culture | 48% | ND | Culture test not commercially available. |
| Nowakowski et al | 2001 | EM/CDC | EM | PCR | 72% | ND | PCR tests not generally available. |
| Nowakowski et al | 2001 | EM/CDC | EM | Two-tier | 68% | ND | Specificity not determined in the study. |
| Puri et al | 2014 | Clinical | Consecutive presentation | LTT MELISA | ND | ND | Study compared WB and LTT test results. Absolute sensitivity and specificity were not investigated. |
| Rebman et al | 2015 | EM rash >5 cm | EM | All | 41% | ND | Commercial laboratory. No data for specificity. |
| Robertson et al | 2000 | EM or Clinical | All | Unspecified WB | 19%–100% | 44%–100% | 2-, 3-, and 4-band interpretation criteria, not 5 band. |
| Ryffel et al | 1999 | Seropositive | All | WB | ND | ND | Protein-based study for |
| Schulte-Spectel et al | 2003 | Seropositive | Neuro | Whole cell blot | 86% | 86% | Test development. |
| Seriburi et al | 2012 | Clinical | All | two-tier | ND | ND | False-positive study of clinical cases. No sensitivity data. |
| Skarpaas et al | 2007 | Definite LNB | Neuro | Quick C6 Sera | 98% | 61% | Excluded for low specificity (61% with serum). |
| Skogman et al | 2008 | CSF positive | NB | ELISA | 82% | 100% | Only data for in-house test is available. |
| Smismans et al | 2006 | Seropositive | All | Study mean | 77% | 84% | Borderline results counted positive. Specificity less than 85%. |
| Steere et al | 2008 | CDC/EM | All | C6/two-tier | 45% | 100% | First-stage test was in-house ELISA. |
| Vermeesch et al | 2009 | Seropositive/CSF | Neurological | C6 | 68% | ND | No specificity data. |
| Wormser et al | 2008 | CDC/EM | All | C6/two-tier | 69.5%/38.9% | ND | No specificity data. |
| Wormser et al | 2012 | EM | All | All | 53% | ND | No specificity data. |
| Study mean | 69.3% | 91.5% | Specificity mean based on limited reported data. |
Abbreviations: ESI-MS, electrospray ionization mass spectrometry; sens, weighted mean test sensitivity; spec, test specificity; WB, Western blot; EM, erythema migrans; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; LTT, lymphocyte transformation test; LNB, Lyme neuroborreliosis; ND, not determined; C6, synthetic C6 peptide ELISA.
Figure 1Studies included in the analysis. Weighted sensitivity for each study.
Figure 2ELISA sensitivity.
Abbreviation: ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Figure 3Synthetic C6 peptide ELISA test sensitivity.
Abbreviation: ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Figure 4Western blot test sensitivity.
Figure 5Two-tier sensitivity test.
Test sensitivity summary
| Test method | Sensitivity | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| ELISA | 62.3% | 56.6%–68.1% |
| C6 | 53.9% | 48.3%–61.1% |
| Western Blot | 62.4% | 54.2%–70.7% |
| Two-tier | 53.7% | 49.9%–57.4% |
| ALL | 59.5% | 55.6%–63.5% |
Abbreviations: ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; C6, synthetic C6 peptide ELISA; CI, confidence interval; WB, Western blot.
Test sensitivity for disease stage
| Disease stage | Sensitivity | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| EM | 46.5% | 41.1%–51.9% |
| Acute/early | 35.4% | 30.5%–40.2% |
| Convalescent | 64.5% | 57.3%–71.7% |
| Neurological | 87.3% | 71.4%–97.5% |
| Arthritis | 95.8% | 81.8%–100.0% |
| Neurological/arthritis | 92.2% | 78.4%–100.0% |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; EM, erythema migrans.
Figure 6Sensitivity for acute stage samples.
Figure 7Sensitivity of convalescent samples.
Figure 8Sensitivity for neurological/arthritis/carditis samples.
Figure 9Test sensitivity versus year of publication.