| Literature DB >> 29143616 |
Berit Lange1,2, Teri Roberts3, Jennifer Cohn4, Jamie Greenman4, Johannes Camp5, Azumi Ishizaki6, Luke Messac4, Edouard Tuaillon7,8, Philippe van de Perre7,8, Christine Pichler5, Claudia M Denkinger3, Philippa Easterbrook6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The detection and quantification of hepatitis B (HBV) DNA and hepatitis C (HCV) RNA in whole blood collected on dried blood spots (DBS) may facilitate access to diagnosis and treatment of HBV and HCV infection in resource-poor settings. We evaluated the diagnostic performance of DBS compared to venous blood samples for detection and quantification of HBV-DNA and HCV-RNA in two systematic reviews and meta-analyses on the diagnostic accuracy of HBV DNA and HCV RNA from DBS compared to venous blood samples.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic accuracy; Dried blood spots (DBS); HBV DNA; HCV RNA; Virological testing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29143616 PMCID: PMC5688458 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-017-2776-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Prisma flow chart of studies for the systematic review of detection of hepatitis B DNA from DBS samples compared to venous blood sampling (plasma/serum)
Characteristics of studies included in the systematic review of detection of HBV-DNA and update of the systematic review on HCV-RNA from DBS samples compared to venous blood sampling (plasma/serum)
| Author, | Journal | Study pop and sample size | Storage conditions | DBS collection method | Plasma method PCR | DBS method PCR | Limit of detection | Specificity | Sensitivity | Correlation/Association | Effect of storage conditions | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alidjinou | Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 32 HBV patients | DBS at room temperature, | 30 μl of plasma onto filter paper | COBAS Taqman/COBAS AmpliPrep | COBAS Taqman/COBAS AmpliPrep | Detection limit for plasma was 12 IU/ml, In 3 patients, | NR | 25/26 | Spearman correlation coefficient | NR | NR |
| Alhusseini | Americal Journal of Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 50 HBs Ag pos, but only 42 later included in accuracy calculation10 negative controls | Stored at −80 °C | 50 μl from whole blood sample on Watman filter paper | In house | In house | No cut off suggested, | 10/10 | 42/42 | Good correlation ( | NR | NR |
| Durgadevi | Conference abstract | 60 hospital patients, 30 Hep B surface marker positive 22 of which were HBV-DNA pos by serum ELISA and 30 negative | DBS were stored at 25° for 4 and 7 days | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | 22/22100% | NR | All 22 serum positive cases could be detected from DBS after 4 and after 7 days at 25° | NR |
| Gupta | J Clin Microbiology | 60 mothers with chronic HBV infection, 5 known negative laboratory staff | −20C for filter paper | 5 μl whole blood from finger prick on Whatman paper | In house (endpoint) | In house (endpoint) | Limit of detection 10E4 virus particles in each 5 μl blood spot | 13/15 | 43/45 | NR | Complete stability was maintained at 37 °C for 5 months, less denaturated protein when stored at 37 °C | No diagnostic accuracy calculation but can be calculated from data |
| Gruner | Journal of Visualized Experiments | Inpatients, 299 | Temperature: −20C, 4C or ambient temperature | Venipuncture, 100 μl whole blood on paper card | Not specified | Not specified | Unclear, but 7 samples not detected with DBS had HBV DNA concentrations between 409 to 3643 IU/ml | NR | 93% | NR | NR | NR |
| Jardi | Hepatology | 82 patients with chronic HBV infection (23 HBeAgpos, 39 HBeAgneg, 20 HBeAg inactive, 15 HBe neg under lamivudine therapy | Storage at −20 °C | 20 μl of capillary blood on 5 mm paper disks (Scheicher) | In house | In house | LOD 100cop/ml | NR | 72/77 | Regression coefficient HBV-DNA concentration in DBS versus serum samples r(2) = 0.96 ( | Stability of unknown number of DBS samples assessed by leaving samples for several days in different conditions, no effect on HBV-DNA levels | NR |
| Lira | Virology Journal | 47 HBV HBsAg positive patients | Plasma samples at −70 °C, filter paper at −20 °C | 50 μl per card (Schleicher + Schull) | QIAamp® Ultrasens® Virus kit (QIAGEN GMBH, Germany), | NR | NR | NR | 47/47100% | The Pearson correlation 0.93 ( | No adverse effect by sample storage from ten patients at 4 degree, 25 degree, and 37 degree C for 7 days | NR |
| Mohamed | PLOS One | 50 HBV positive patient, 10 HBV negative patients | Dried for 18 h in room temperature, then processed | 50 μl on 12 mm discs (Whatman) | Cobas AmpliPrep/Cobas Taqman HBV test, | Cobas AmpliPrep/Cobas Taqman HBV test, | limit of detection of HBV-DNA 20 IU/ml plasma, limit of detection DBS 914 IU/ml | 49/50 98% | 50/50100% | Correlation good between DBS and plasma (r2 = 0.86, | No difference in HBV-DNA levels at 1,3,7 and 14 days of storage at room temperature | Lower sensitivity in patients with 1000 IU/ml |
| Mossner | Cohort | 404 Prospective patients from hepatitis clinic and blood donors | Temperature: Room temperature | Finger prick, 75 μ on Whatman filter paper | HBV DNA (Ultrio Elite dHBV). COBAS® AmpliPrep/COBAS® | HBV DNA (Ultrio Elite dHBV). COBAS® AmpliPrep/COBAS® | Limit of detection for HBV-DNA 200 IU/ml | 7/7 | 53/76 | NR | Variation of 24 h to up to 7 d found no difference in stability of samples | |
| Ross | Virology | 150 samples | Dried overnight at room temperature, then processed | 100 μl applied to filter paper (Whatman, Schleicher + Schüll) | artus HBV LC PCR (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) | artus HBV LC PCR (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) | Limit of detection 100 iU/ml in plasma, 7 samples with HBV concentrations of 409–3643 IU/ml missed | 50/50100% | 93/100 93% | NR | NR | NR |
| Stene Johansen | PLOS One | Known HBs pos patients, recruited at hospital | Dried overnight, then stored at ambient temperatures for a median of 24 days | Venipuncture, 80 μl applied to Whatman filter card | Abbott RealTime HBV assay). | Abbott RealTime HBV assay). | NR | NR | 21/21 |
| NR | NR |
| Vinikoor | Clinical Journal of Virology | 68 | Dried for 12 hours at room temperature, stored at -80C | 50 μl applied to Whatman filter paper | Cobas AmpliPrep/Cobas Taqman HBV test | Cobas AmpliPrep/Cobas Taqman HBV test | The probability of a undetectable DBS resultat a plasma viral load of 200 IU/ml was 13.8% (95% CI: 7.7–23.7) but this dropped to 1.8% (95% CI: 0.5–6.6) when a 2000 IU/ml cut-off was used and 0.2% (95% CI: 0.03–1.7) at 20,000 IU/ml. | 62/68 | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| HCV-RNA – additional studies from upgrade of existing systematic review [ | ||||||||||||
| Dokubo | Journal of Clinical Virology | 148 participants in a prospective study of HCV | DBS air-dried for 2 hours, then sent to another insttute, then stored at −70 °C | Fingerstick on Whatman 903 cards 0.5 ml blood | Standard diagnostics HCV TMA (Norvatis®) | Standard diagnostics HCV TMA (Norvatis®) | 100% | 90% | Kappa = 0.92 | NR | ||
| Gruner | Journal of Visualized Experiments | Inpatients, 299 | Temperature: −20C, 4C or ambient temperature | Venipuncture, 100 μl whole blood on paper card | Not specified | Not specified | NR | NR | 100% | NR | NR | NR |
| Marins, 2017 | Journal of Virological Methods | 48 patients with chronic HCV infection | Left to dry in ambient temperatures overnight, then in zip bags at ambient temperatures for 4 weeks | Venipuncture, 35 μl whole blood on Whatman card | COBAS® AmpliPrep/COBAS® Taqman® HCV Quantitative Test | COBAS® AmpliPrep/COBAS® Taqman® HCV Quantitative Test | Not detected at 4.75 log10 IU/mL. | NR | 47/48 (98%) | |||
| Marques | Journal of Clinical Virology | 99 (59 anti HCV/HCV RNA pos, 40 neg samples) | NR | Venipuncture, 3–5 drops on Whatman filter paper | In house | In house | 58.5 copies/ml | 100% | 35/44 (65.9%) | Kappa: 0.648 | Low variation during 3 days at ambient temperatures | NR |
| Mossner | World Journal of Gastroenterology | 404 Prospective patients from hepatitis clinic and blood donors | Temperature: Room temperature | Finger prick, 75 μ on Whatman filter paper | HCV RNA (Ultrio Elite dHBV). COBAS® AmpliPrep/COBAS® | HCV RNA (Ultrio Elite dHBV). COBAS® AmpliPrep/COBAS® | Limit of detection for HCV-RNA 100 IU/ml | 25/26 | 81/84 | NR | Variation of 24 h to up to 7 d found no difference in stability of samples | NR |
| Soulier, France | The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 511 patients recruited, with known serostatus for HCV | Temperature:-80 | Venipuncture, 50 μl on Whatman filter paper | 1) Cobas AmpliPrep automated | 1) Cobas AmpliPrep automated | NR | 1) 100% | 1) 97,1% | NR | 25 dB samples stored at ambient temperatures (24 °C) for a mean duration (±SD) of | |
Risk of bias in included studies for the systematic review on detection of HBV-DNA and update of the systematic review on detection of HCV-RNA from DBS samples compared to venous blood sampling (plasma/serum)
| Author | Patient selection | Bias | Index test | Bias | Reference standard | Bias | Flow and timing | Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Was a case control design avoided | Blinded to reference standard? | Are laboratory personelle blinded to index test? | Is there an appropriate interval between the index test and reference standard? | |||||
| HBV-DNA | ||||||||
| Alidjinou | NR, but no case control design | UR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | NR | UR |
| Alhusseini | Case control design, sampling NR | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | NR | UR |
| Durgadevi | Case control design | HR | NR | UR | NR | UR | NR | UR |
| Gupta | Selection of only known HBV carriers, | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Partly reported | LR |
| Gruner | NR | UR | Not blinded, NR | UR | NR | UR | NR | UR |
| Jardi R | selection only of cases | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Partly reported | LR |
| Lira R | Selection of only cases | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | NR | UR |
| Mohamed S | Case control design | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | NR | UR |
| Mossner | Sampling from high-risk and low risk groups | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Sampling reported, same reference standard, all patients included in analysis | LR |
| Ross | No case control design, sampling NR | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Flow reported | LR |
| Stene- Johannsen | Sampling from high-risk | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Sampling reported, same reference standard, all patients included in analysis | LR |
| Vinikoor | No case control design, only cases | HR | Not blinded interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Flow reported | LR |
| HCV-RNA | ||||||||
| Dokubo | No case control, concurrent sampling from a prospective cohort | LR | NR | UR | NR | UR | Sampling reported, same reference standard, all patients recruited included in analysis | LR |
| Gruner | NR | UR | Not blinded, NR | UR | NR | UR | NR | UR |
| Marins | Only cases | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | NR, same reference standard, NR | UR |
| Marques | NR | UR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | NR, same reference standard, NR | UR |
| Mossner | Sampling from high-risk and low risk groups | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Sampling reported, same reference standard, all patients included in analysis | LR |
| Soulier | Sampling from high-risk and low risk-groups | HR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | Not blinded, interpretation unbiased | LR | NR, same reference standard, NR | LR |
HR High risk of bias, LR Low risk of bias, UR Unclear risk of bias, NR Not reported
Fig. 2Forest plot of sensitivities and specificities of the use of DBS samples for detection of hepatitis B-DNA compared to serum samples
Fig. 3Prisma flow chart of studies for the systematic review of detection of hepatitis C RNA from DBS samples compared to venous blood sampling (plasma/serum)
Fig. 4Forest plot of sensitivities and specificities of the use of DBS samples for detection of hepatitis C-RNA compared to serum samples