| Literature DB >> 30815286 |
Laura T Mazzola1, Cassandra Kelly-Cirino1.
Abstract
Nipah virus (NiV) is an emerging pathogen that, unlike other priority pathogens identified by WHO, is endemic to Southeast Asia. It is most commonly transmitted through exposure to saliva or excrement from the Pteropus fruit bat, or direct contact with intermediate animal hosts, such as pigs. NiV infection causes severe febrile encephalitic disease and/or respiratory disease; treatment options are limited to supportive care. A number of in-house diagnostic assays for NiV using serological and nucleic acid amplification techniques have been developed for NiV and are used in laboratory settings, including some early multiplex panels for differentiation of NiV infection from other febrile diseases. However, given the often rural and remote nature of NiV outbreak settings, there remains a need for rapid diagnostic tests that can be implemented at the point of care. Additionally, more reliable assays for surveillance of communities and livestock will be vital to achieving a better understanding of the ecology of the fruit bat host and transmission risk to other intermediate hosts, enabling implementation of a 'One Health' approach to outbreak prevention and the management of this zoonotic disease. An improved understanding of NiV viral diversity and infection kinetics or dynamics will be central to the development of new diagnostics, and access to clinical specimens must be improved to enable effective validation and external quality assessments. Target product profiles for NiV diagnostics should be refined to take into account these outstanding needs.Entities:
Keywords: NiV; henipavirus; in vitro diagnostics; nipah virus; outbreaks
Year: 2019 PMID: 30815286 PMCID: PMC6361328 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Geographical distribution of henipavirus (Nipah and Hendra) outbreaks. Reprinted from Emergency preparedness and response—Nipah virus infection, WHO, Geographic distribution of henipavirus outbreaks and fruit bats of Pteropodidae family, copyright (2008).
Diagnostic capacity vs setting
| Test type | Infrastructure requirements | Training requirements | Test process time | NiV target population | Number of NiV in-house or LDTs* | Number of NiV commercial tests* |
| Virus isolation, neutralisation | HIGH/BSL-4 | HIGH | 5 days for cell culture | Human, | >3 | 0 |
| NAAT | HIGH | HIGH | 2–3 hours | Human, | >5 | 3 |
| NAAT POC | MODERATE | MODERATE | 1–2 hours | Human, animal | 0 | 0 |
| ELISA, IFA | HIGH to MODERATE | MODERATE | 3–4 hours | Human, | >5 | 1 |
| RDTs | LOW | LOW | <30 min | Human, | 0 | 0 |
*In-house and LDTs described in sections below; commercial sources listed in online supplementary table S1.
BSL, biosafety level; IFA, immunofluorescence assay; LDT, laboratory-developed test; NAAT, nucleic acid amplification test; NiV, Nipah virus; POC, point of care; RDT, rapid diagnostic test.
World Organisation for Animal Health test methods available for diagnosis of henipavirus and their purpose
| Method | Purpose | |||||
| Population freedom from infection | Individual animal freedom from infection prior to movement | Contribution to eradication policies | Confirmation of clinical cases | Prevalence of infection—surveillance (no clinical) | Immune status in individual animals or populations post-vaccination | |
| Agent identification* | ||||||
| Virus isolation | + | + | — | +++ | — | |
| RT-PCR and qRT-PCR | + | + | ++ | +++ | ++ | — |
| IHC | — | — | — | ++ | — | — |
| IFA | — | — | — | ++ | — | — |
| Detection of immune response† | ||||||
| ELISA | +++ | +++ | +++ | + | +++ | +++ |
| VNT | +++ | +++ | +++ | + | +++ | +++ |
| Bead assays | +++ | +++ | +++ | + | +++ | +++ |
+++, recommended method; ++, suitable method; +, may be used in some situations, but cost, reliability or other factors severely limit application; —, not appropriate for this purpose. Although not all of the tests listed as +++ or ++ have undergone formal validation, their routine nature and the fact that they have been used widely without dubious results make them acceptable.
*A combination of agent identification methods applied on the same clinical specimen is recommended.
†One of the listed serological tests is sufficient. Reproduced with permission from OIE Terrestrial Manual, 7th ed. (May 2015 update).70
IFA, immunofluorescence assay; IHC, immunohistochemistry; RT-PCR, reverse transcriptase PCR; VNT, virus neutralisation test; qRT-PCR, quantitative RT-PCR.
In-house NAAT tests for NiV*
| Assay type | Target | Reference laboratory | Reference |
| RT-PCR | NiV P, N genes | ICDDRB and IEDCR, |
|
| Real-time RT-PCR | NiV N gene | Institut Pasteur (France) |
|
| SYBR qRT-PCR | NiV N gene | University of Malaya (Malaysia) |
|
| Duplex nested RT-PCR | NiV N gene | Chulalongkorn University Hospital (Thailand) |
|
| Nested RT-PCR | HeV/NiV P gene | Bernhard Nocht Institute (Germany), CDC (USA) |
|
| Nested RT-PCR | NiV L gene | CSIRO/AAHL, University of Cambridge, Zoological Society (UK) |
|
| SYBR qRT-PCR | NiV N gene | CSIRO/AAHL, University of Cambridge, Zoological Society (UK) |
|
| Real-time RT-PCR | NiV/HeV P, M, N genes | CSIRO/AAHL, University of Cambridge, Zoological Society (UK) |
|
| Multiplex bead-based real-time RT-PCR | NiV, HeV | CSIRO/AAHL (Australia) |
|
| Multiplex array card real-time RT-PCR | 26 multiplex panel including NiV N gene | CDC (Kenya, USA) |
|
| Multiplex array card real-time RT-PCR | 21 multiplex panel including NiV N gene | Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kenya), CDC (Kenya, USA) |
|
*Adapted with permission from Springer Customer Service Centre GmBH: Springer Nature Indian Journal of Virology,66 copyright 2013; Springer Customer Service Centre GmBH: Springer Nature Springer eBook,67 copyright 2012; and World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE).70
AAHL, Australian Animal Health Laboratory; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CSIRO, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; HeV, Hendra virus; ICDDRB, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh; IEDCR, Institute of Epidemiology, Disease Control and Research; NiV, Nipah virus; RT-PCR, reverse transcriptase PCR; qRT-PCR, quantitative RT-PCR.
In-house serological tests for NiV*
| Assay type | Target | Reference laboratory | Reference |
| ELISA | NiV IgG, IgM | ICDDRB and IEDCR (Bangladesh), CDC (USA) |
|
| ELISA | NiV neutralising Ab | DVS (Malaysia) |
|
| ELISA | NiV G protein | Universiti Putra (Malaysia) |
|
| Western blot, ELISA | NiV N, M proteins | Canadian Science Center for Human and Animal Health (Canada) |
|
| ELISA | NiV N protein | Chinese National Diagnostic Center for Animal Diseases (China) |
|
| ELISA | NiV N protein | Institute of Tropical Medicine (Japan) |
|
| ELISA | NiV/HeV P proteins | CSIRO/AAHL (Australia), University of Malaya (Malaysia), China Epidemiology Center (China) |
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| ELISA | NiV/HeV N, HeV P proteins | CDC (USA) |
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| ELISA | NiV/HeV G protein | National Institute for Infectious Diseases (Japan) |
|
| ELISA | NiV M protein | MARDI, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Monash University Malaysia |
|
| ELISA | NiV N protein | National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases/ICAR (India) |
|
| Multiplex bead-based antibody capture | NiV G, HeV G proteins | CSIRO/AAHL (Australia), Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences (USA) |
|
*Adapted with permission from Springer Customer Service Centre GmBH: Springer Nature Indian Journal of Virology,66 copyright 2013; and Springer Customer Service Centre GmBH: Springer Nature Springer eBook,67 copyright 2012.
AAHL, Australian Animal Health Laboratory; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CSIRO, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation; DVS, Department of Veterinary Services; HeV, Hendra virus; ICAR, Indian Council of Agricultural Research; ICDDRB, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh; IEDCR, Institute of Epidemiology, Disease Control and Research; MARDI, Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute; NiV, Nipah virus.