| Literature DB >> 30666931 |
Isabel Griffin, Stacey W Martin, Marc Fischer, Trudy V Chambers, Olga Kosoy, Alyssa Falise, Olga Ponomareva, Leah D Gillis, Carina Blackmore, Reynald Jean.
Abstract
Data on the duration of detectable Zika virus-specific IgM in infected persons are limited. Neutralizing antibody cross-reactivity occurs between Zika virus and related flaviviruses, but the degree to which this confounds diagnosis is uncertain. We tested serum specimens collected 12-19 months after illness onset from patients with confirmed Zika virus disease for Zika virus IgM and Zika virus and dengue virus neutralizing antibodies. Among 62 participants, 45 (73%) had detectable Zika virus IgM and 12 (19%) had an equivocal result. Although all patients tested had Zika virus neutralizing antibodies, 39 (63%) also had neutralizing antibodies against dengue virus; of those, 12 (19%) had <4-fold difference between Zika virus and dengue virus titers, and 5 (8%) had dengue virus titer >4-fold higher than Zika virus titer. Prolonged detection of IgM and neutralizing antibody cross-reactivity make it difficult to determine the timing of Zika virus infection and differentiate between related flaviviruses.Entities:
Keywords: Florida; IgM; MAC-ELISA; United States; Zika virus; flaviviruses; immunoglobulin; neutralizing antibodies; viruses
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30666931 PMCID: PMC6346474 DOI: 10.3201/eid2502.181286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Demographic and clinical characteristics of confirmed Zika virus disease case-patients in Miami–Dade County, Florida, USA
| Characteristic | No. (%) enrolled,* n = 62 | No. (%) not enrolled,* n = 290 | p value† |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age group, y | 0.19 | ||
| 1–18 | 2 (3) | 26 (9) | |
| 19–64 | 54 (87) | 247 (85) | |
|
| 6 (10) | 17 (6) |
|
| Sex | 0.85 | ||
| M | 32 (52) | 146 (50) | |
| F | 30 (48) | 144 (50) |
|
| Race/ethnicity | 0.55 | ||
| Non-Hispanic white | 13 (21) | 41 (14) | |
| Non-Hispanic African American | 3 (5) | 14 (5) | |
| Hispanic | 42 (68) | 209 (72) | |
| Unknown | 4 (6) | 26 (9) |
|
| Main symptoms of Zika virus disease‡ | 0.88 | ||
| 1 of 4 | 2 (3) | 12 (4) | |
| 2 of 4 | 15 (24) | 78 (27) | |
| 3 of 4 | 32 (52) | 130 (45) | |
| 4 of 4 | 13 (21) | 69 (24) |
|
| Origin of infection | 0.19 | ||
| Florida | 34 (55) | 133 (46) | |
| Outside Florida | 28 (45) | 157 (54) |
*All percentages are column percentages. †A p value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. ‡Main symptoms were defined as fever, maculopapular rash, arthralgia, and conjunctivitis.
FigureZika virus IgM results for 62 participants in Miami–Dade County, Florida, USA, with PCR-confirmed Zika virus disease by follow-up specimen collection month.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of enrolled participants in Miami–Dade County, Florida, USA, with PCR-confirmed Zika virus disease by Zika virus IgM antibody result 12–19 months after illness onset (n = 62)
| Characteristic | Zika virus IgM results 12–19 mo after symptom onset, no. (%)* | p value† | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Equivocal | Negative | ||
| Age group, y | 0.58 | |||
| 1–18, n = 2 | 2 (100) | 0 | 0 | |
| 19–64, n = 54 | 38 (71) | 12 (22) | 4 (7) | |
|
| 5 (83) | 0 | 1 (17) |
|
| Sex | 0.30 | |||
| M, n = 32 | 25 (78) | 6 (19) | 1 (3) | |
| F, n = 30 | 20 (67) | 6 (20) | 4 (13) |
|
| Race/ethnicity | 0.18 | |||
| Non-Hispanic white, n = 12 | 11 (92) | 1 (8) | 0 | |
| Non-Hispanic African American, n = 4 | 1 (25) | 2 (50) | 1 (25) | |
| Hispanic, n = 42 | 29 (69) | 9 (21) | 4 (10) | |
| Unknown, n = 4 | 4 (100) | 0 | 0 |
|
| Main symptoms of Zika virus‡ | 0.28 | |||
| 1 of 4, n = 2 | 1 (50) | 1 (50) | 0 | |
| 2 of 4, n = 15 | 8 (54) | 5 (33) | 2 (13) | |
| 3 of 4, n = 32 | 25 (78) | 4 (13) | 3 (9) | |
| 4 of 4, n = 13 | 11 (85) | 2 (15) | 0 |
|
| Origin of infection | 0.52 | |||
| Florida, n = 34 | 24 (70) | 6 (18) | 4 (12) | |
| Outside Florida, n = 28 | 21 (75) | 6 (21) | 1 (4) | |
*All percentages are row percentages. †A p-value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. ‡Main symptoms were defined as fever, maculopapular rash, arthralgia, and conjunctivitis.
Diagnostic test interpretations among participants with PCR-confirmed Zika virus disease in Miami–Dade County, Florida, USA, based on IgM and neutralizing antibody results 12–19 months after onset*
| Test results | No. (%), n = 62 | Interpretation† |
|---|---|---|
| Zika virus IgM positive or equivocal, n = 57 | ||
| Zika virus PRNT titer | 21 (34) | Recent Zika virus infection |
| Zika virus PRNT titer | 21 (34) | Recent flavivirus infection |
| <4-fold difference between Zika virus and DENV PRNT titers | 11 (18) | Recent flavivirus infection |
| DENV PRNT titer | 4 (6) | Recent flavivirus infection |
| ZIKV IgM negative, n = 5 | ||
| Zika virus PRNT titer | 2 (3) | Previous Zika virus infection |
| Zika virus PRNT titer | 1 (2) | Previous flavivirus infection |
| <4-fold difference between Zika virus and DENV PRNT titers | 1 (2) | Previous flavivirus infection |
| DENV PRNT titer | 1 (2) | Previous flavivirus infection |
*DENV, dengue virus; PRNT, plaque reduction neutralization test. †Recent Zika virus infection: Zika virus IgM positive or equivocal with a Zika virus PRNT titer ≥10 and dengue PRNT titer <10; recent flavivirus infection: Zika virus IgM positive or equivocal with a Zika virus PRNT titer >10 or dengue PRNT titer >10; previous Zika virus infection: Zika virus IgM negative with a Zika virus PRNT titer ≥10 and dengue PRNT titer <10; previous flavivirus infection: Zika virus IgM negative with a Zika virus PRNT titer >10 or dengue PRNT titer >10.