| Literature DB >> 31731711 |
Sandra Felten1, Katrin Hartmann1.
Abstract
Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) is a fatal disease that poses several challenges for veterinarians: clinical signs and laboratory changes are non-specific, and there are two pathotypes of the etiologic agent feline coronavirus (FCoV), sometimes referred to as feline enteric coronavirus (FECV) and feline infectious peritonitis virus (FIPV) that vary fundamentally in their virulence, but are indistinguishable by a number of diagnostic methods. This review focuses on all important steps every veterinary practitioner has to deal with and new diagnostic tests that can be considered when encountering a cat with suspected FIP with the aim to establish a definitive diagnosis. It gives an overview on all available direct and indirect diagnostic tests and their sensitivity and specificity reported in the literature in different sample material. By providing summarized data for sensitivity and specificity of each diagnostic test and each sample material, which can easily be accessed in tables, this review can help to facilitate the interpretation of different diagnostic tests and raise awareness of their advantages and limitations. Additionally, diagnostic trees depict recommended diagnostic steps that should be performed in cats suspected of having FIP based on their clinical signs or clinicopathologic abnormalities. These steps can easily be followed in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: FIP; ICC; IHC; RT-PCR; antibody; diagnosis; immunocytochemistry; immunohistochemistry
Year: 2019 PMID: 31731711 PMCID: PMC6893704 DOI: 10.3390/v11111068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Studies evaluating sensitivity and specificity of the detection of serum antibodies in comparison to either histopathology, a combination of diagnostic tests or clinical suspicion of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP). Control groups either consisted of healthy cats or cats with diseases other than FIP (with or without clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Number of Samples | Antibody Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | FIP ( | IFAT | 28–74% | 64–92% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FIP ( | IFAT | 30–79% | 64–98% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FIP ( | IFAT | 85% | 57% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FIP ( | IFAT | 100% | n. d. | Clinical suspicion | None |
| [ | FIP ( | Western blot | 100% | 25–45% | Combination of tests | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
IFAT = immunofluorescence antibody test; n. d. = not determined.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies evaluating the detection of antibodies in effusion for the diagnosis of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) compared to histopathology, a combination of tests or a clinical suspicion of FIP. The control group of the first study consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP (with clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Type | Number of Samples | Antibody Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | IFAT | 86% | 85% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites | FIP ( | IFAT | 100% | n. d. | Clinical suspicion | None |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | IFAT | 84% | n. d. | Combination of tests (according to ABCD guidelines) | None |
ABCD = European Advisory Board on Cat Diseases; IFAT = immunofluorescence antibody test; n. d. = not determined.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies evaluating the detection of antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) for the diagnosis of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) compared to histopathology. Control groups consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP (with or without neurological signs).
| Study | Number of Samples | Antibody Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | FIP without neurological signs ( | IFAT | 0% | n. d. | Histopathology | None |
| [ | FIP with neurological signs ( | IFAT | 94% | 100% | Histopathology | Neurologic diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FIP without neurological signs ( | IFAT | 31% | 100% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FIP with neurological signs ( | IFAT | 60% | 93% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FIP with neurological signs ( | IFAT | 10% | n. d. | Clinical suspicion | None |
IFAT = immunofluorescence antibody test; n. d. = not determined.
Sensitivity and specificity from a study evaluating the detection of immune complexes for the diagnosis of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) compared to histopathology. The control group consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP (with clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Material | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Serum | FIP ( | Competitive ELISA | 48% | 91% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
ELISA = enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies evaluating immunostaining for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) antigen in tissues samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed either by histopathology alone or in combination with immunohistochemistry (IHC) of tissue samples. Control groups, if present, consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP with clinical signs consistent with FIP.
| Study | Sample Material | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Various tissues | FIP ( | IHC | 98% | 100% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | TCB liver | FIP ( | IHC | 24% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC of other organs | None |
| [ | TCB kidney | FIP ( | IHC | 31% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC of other organs | None |
| [ | FNA liver | FIP ( | ICC | 17–31% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC of other organs | None |
| [ | FNA kidney | FIP ( | ICC | 11–20% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC of other organs | None |
| [ | Various tissues | FIP ( | IHC | 100% | n. d. | Histopathology | None |
| [ | FNA mesenteric lymph nodes | FIP ( | ICC | 53% | 91% | Histopathology/IHC of other organs | Diseases other than FIP |
FNA = fine-needle aspirate; ICC = immunocytochemistry; n. d. = not determined; TCB = Tru-cut biopsies.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies evaluating immunostaining for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) antigen in effusion samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed either by histopathology alone or in combination with immunohistochemistry (IHC) of tissue samples. Control groups consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP with clinical signs consistent with FIP.
| Study | Sample Material | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | IFA | 95% | 100% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | IFA | 69% | 100% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | IFA | 95% | 100% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | IFA | 57% | 100% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | IFA | 100% | 71% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites, pleural or pericardial effusion | FIP ( | ICC | 85% | 72% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
ICC = immunocytochemistry; IFA = immunofluorescence.
Sensitivity and specificity from a study evaluating immunostaining for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) antigen in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed by histopathology and immunohistochemistry (IHC) of tissue samples. The control group consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP with clinical signs (neurological or non-neurological) consistent with FIP.
| Study | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | FIP ( | ICC | 85% | 83% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FIP with neurological signs ( | ICC | 78% | 88% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FIP without neurological signs ( | ICC | 91% | 50% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
ICC = immunocytochemistry.
Sensitivity and specificity from a study evaluating immunostaining for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) antigen in aqueous humor samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed by histopathology and immunohistochemistry (IHC) of tissue samples. The control group consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP with clinical signs (with or without uveitis) consistent with FIP.
| Study | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | FIP ( | ICC | 64% | 82% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
ICC = immunocytochemistry.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) RNA in tissues from cats with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) or control cats. FIP was confirmed by various methods and control groups either consisted of healthy cats or cats with diseases other than FIP (with or without clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Material | Number of Samples | RT-PCR Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Liver, kidney, spleen | FIP ( | RT-PCR | 88% | 39% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Liver, kidney, spleen | Experimentally induced FIP | RT-PCR | 100% | n. d. | Experimen-tal infection | None |
| [ | Hemolymphatic tissue | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 60–87% | 54–67% | Histopathology/IHC | Healthy |
| [ | Mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen, small intestine, lung | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 91% | 50% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FNA of mesenteric lymph nodes | FIP ( | RT-qPCR | 90% | 96% | Histopathology or diagnostic algorithm | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Various tissues | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR for mRNA | 60–100% | 100% | Histopathology/IHC | Healthy |
| [ | Various tissues | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 96% | 78% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FNA of various tissues | FIP ( | RT-PCR | 100% | n. d. | Histopathology | None |
| [ | Various tissues | FIP ( | RT-qPCR | 98% | 73% | Histopathology/IHC | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Pooled tissues | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 94% | 90% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Various tissues | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 65–95% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
FNA = fine-needle aspirates; IHC = immunohistochemistry; mRNA = messenger RNA; n. d. = not determined; RT-nPCR = nested RT-PCR; RT-qPCR = quantitative RT-PCR.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) RNA in blood from cats with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) or control cats. FIP was confirmed by various methods and control groups either consisted of healthy cats or cats with diseases other than FIP (with or without clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Material | Number of Samples | RT-PCR Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Serum, plasma | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 56–75% | 75–88% | Histopathology | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Plasma | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 71% | 89% | Histopathology | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Serum, plasma, whole blood | FIP ( | RT-snPCR | 67–87% | 10–20% | Histopathology | Healthy |
| [ | Serum, plasma, whole blood | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 20–75% | 100% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Serum | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 53% | 88% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | PBMC | FIP ( | RT-PCR for mRNA | 93% | 100% | Histopathology | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | PBMC | FIP ( | RT-PCR for mRNA | 46% | 95% | Histopathology or only clinical suspicion | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Whole blood | FIP ( | RT-PCR for mRNA | 100% | 48% | Clinical suspicion | Healthy |
| [ | Whole blood | FIP ( | RT-PCR | 100% | 33% | Clinical suspicion | Healthy |
| [ | Whole blood | FIP ( | RT-PCR for mRNA | 100% | 85% | Clinical suspicion | Healthy |
| [ | WBC | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR for mRNA | 100% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | Healthy |
| [ | Serum, PBMC | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 15–29% | 100% | Histopathology or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Whole blood | FCoV-positive( | RT-LAMP | 25–50% | 100% | RT-nPCR | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Serum/plasma | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 9% | 100% | Histopathology, IHC or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Serum/plasma | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 14% | 100% | Histopathology or IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Whole blood | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 75% | 100% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Buffy coat | Controls ( | RT-qPCR | n. d. | 96% | None | Healthy |
| [ | Buffy coat | Controls ( | RT-qPCR for mRNA | n. d. | 99.5% | None | Healthy |
| [ | Buffy coat, serum or whole blood | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 36–77% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
IHC = immunohistochemistry; mRNA = messenger RNA; n. d. = not determined; PBMC = peripheral blood mononuclear cells; RT-LAMP = reverse transcriptase loop-mediated isothermal amplification; RT-nPCR = nested RT-PCR; RT-snPCR = semi-nested RT-PCR; RT-qPCR = quantitative RT-PCR; WBC = white blood cells.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) RNA in effusion from cats with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) or control cats. FIP was confirmed by various methods and control groups either consisted of healthy cats or cats with diseases other than FIP (with or without clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Material | Number of Samples | RT-PCR Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Ascites | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 100% | 100% | Histopathology | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 91% | 94% | Histopathology or laboratory fluid analysis | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 100% | 100% | Histopathology (some cats) | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 100% | 100% | Histopathology | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 96% | n. d. | Histopathology | None |
| [ | Ascites, pleural or pericardial effusion | FIP (n = 20) | Real-time RT-PCR | 85% | 100% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 89% | 100% | Histopathology or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Effusion | FCoV-positive | RT-LAMP | 40% | 100% | RT-nPCR | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | RT-LAMP | 35–59% | 95–97% | Histopathology or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion or tissue | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | RT-qPCR | 85% | n. d. | Combination of tests (according to ABCD guidelines) | None |
| [ | Ascites, pleural or pericardial effusion | FIP ( | RT-qPCR | 91% | 96% | Histopathology/IHC | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites, pleural or pericardial effusion | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 72% | 100% | Histopathology, IHC or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 97% | 88% | Histopathology and/or IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Effusion | FIP ( | RT-nPCR | 100% | 83% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Effusion | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 86% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
ABCD = European Advisory Board on Cat Diseases; IHC = immunohistochemistry; n. d. = not determined; RT-LAMP = reverse transcriptase loop-mediated isothermal amplification; RT-nPCR = nested RT-PCR; RT-qPCR = quantitative RT-PCR.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) RNA in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from cats with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) or control cats. FIP was confirmed by histopathology or detection of FCoV antigen and control groups consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP (either only neurologic or also non-neurologic diseases with clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Material | Number of Samples | RT-PCR Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | CSF | FIP ( | RT-PCR | 21% | 100% | Histopathology | Neurologic diseases other than FIP |
| [ | CSF | FIP with neurological signs ( | RT-PCR | 31% | 100% | Histopathology | Neurologic diseases other than FIP |
| [ | CSF | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 42% | 100% | Histopathology or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | CSF | FIP with neurological and/or ocular signs ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 86% | 100% | Histopathology or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | CSF | FIP ( | RT-qPCR | 50% | 100% | Histopathology/IHC | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | CSF | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 63% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
IHC = immunohistochemistry; n. d. = not determined; RT-qPCR = quantitative RT-PCR.
Sensitivity and specificity from studies using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) RNA in aqueous humor samples from cats with feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) or control cats. FIP was confirmed by immunohistochemistry (IHC) and control groups either consisted of cats with diseases other than FIP or cats euthanized due to behavioral conditions.
| Study | Sample Material | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Aqueous humor | FIP ( | RT-qPCR | 50% | n. d. | IHC | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Aqueous humor | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 25% | n. d. | IHC | None |
| [ | Aqueous humor | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 40% | 100% | IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
n. d. = not determined; RT-qPCR = quantitative RT-PCR.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies evaluating the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) spike (S) gene mutations in tissue samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed by histopathology alone or in combination with immunohistochemistry (IHC), control cats were either healthy cats or cats with diseases other than FIP (with or without clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Type | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Tissue or ascites | FIP ( | RT-nPCR plus S gene sequencing | 96% | n. d. | Histopathology | None |
| [ | Tissue | FIP ( | RT-qPCR plus pyrosequencing | 91% (M1058L) | 11% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Tissue | FIP ( | RT-qPCR plus sequencing | 100% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
| [ | FNA of various tissues | FIP ( | RT-PCR plus sequencing | 89% | n. d. | Histopathology | None |
| [ | Tissue | FIP ( | RT-qPCR plus pyrosequencing ± Sanger sequencing | 81% | 95% | Histopathology/IHC | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Tissue | FIP ( | RT-nPCR plus sequencing | 70% | 88% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Pooled tissues | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 71% | 100% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | FNA or IB of various tissues | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 15–50% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
FNA = fine-needle aspirates; IB = incisional biopsies; M1058L = substitution of methionine to leucine at position 1058 of the FCoV S protein; n. d. = not determined; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; RT-nPCR = nested RT-PCR; RT-qPCR = quantitative RT-PCR.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies evaluating the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) spike (S) gene mutations in blood samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed by histopathology alone, in combination with immunohistochemistry (IHC) or by positive immunostaining of FCoV antigen in effusion. Control cats were cats with diseases other than FIP (with clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Type | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Serum/plasma | FIP ( | RT-nPCR plus S gene sequencing | 7% | n. d. | Histopathology, IHC or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Serum/plasma | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 0% | n. d. | Histopathology and/or IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Whole blood | FIP ( | RT-nPCR plus S gene sequencing | 43% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Buffy coat, serum or whole blood | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 0–23% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
n. d. = not determined; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; RT-nPCR = nested RT-PCR.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies evaluating the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) spike (S) gene mutations in effusion samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed by histopathology alone, in combination with immunohistochemistry (IHC) or by immunostaining of FCoV antigen in effusion. Control cats were either healthy cats or cats with diseases other than FIP (with or without clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Type | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Ascites | FIP ( | RT-nPCR plus S gene sequencing | 83% | n. d. | n. d. | None |
| [ | Ascites, pleural or pericardial effusion | FIP ( | RT-qPCR plus pyrosequencing | 60% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | CSF, aqueous humor, ascites, pleural or pericardial effusion | FIP ( | RT-qPCR plus pyrosequencing | 60% | 98% | Histopathology/IHC | Healthy or diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites, pleural or pericardial effusion | FIP ( | RT-nPCR plus S gene sequencing | 65% | n. d. | Histopathology, IHC or detection of FCoV antigen in effusion | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Ascites or pleural effusion | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 69% | 96% | Histopathology and/or IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Body cavity effusions | FIP ( | RT-nPCR plus S gene sequencing | 40% | 83% | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | Body cavity effusions | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 64% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
CSF = cerebrospinal fluid; n. d. = not determined; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; RT-nPCR = nested RT-PCR; RT-qPCR = quantitative RT-PCR.
Sensitivity and specificity from studies evaluating the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) spike (S) gene mutations in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed by histopathology and immunohistochemistry (IHC). Control cats, if present, were cats with diseases other than FIP (with clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Type | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | CSF | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 10% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | CSF | FIP with neurological signs ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 17% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
| [ | CSF | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 44% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
n. d. = not determined; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction.
Sensitivity and specificity from different studies evaluating the detection of feline coronavirus (FCoV) spike (S) gene mutations in aqueous humor samples. Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) was confirmed by histopathology and immunohistochemistry (IHC). Control cats, if present, were cats with diseases other than FIP (with clinical signs consistent with FIP).
| Study | Sample Type | Number of Samples | Assay | Sensitivity | Specificity | Reference Standard for FIP | Control Cats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Aqueous humor | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 10% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | None |
| [ | Aqueous humor | FIP ( | Real-time RT-PCR | 17% | n. d. | Histopathology/IHC | Diseases other than FIP |
n. d. = not determined; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction.
Figure 1Decision trees depicting recommended diagnostic steps in a case suspicious of FIP, depending on a cat’s clinical presentation: (a) diagnostic steps recommended in a cat presenting with effusion; (b) diagnostic steps recommended in a cat presenting with neurological signs; (c) diagnostic steps recommended in a cat presenting with uveitis; (d) diagnostic steps recommended in a cat presenting with non-specific clinical signs. CSF = cerebrospinal fluid; FCoV = feline coronavirus; FIP = feline infectious peritonitis; FNA = fine-needle aspirates; IHC = immunohistochemistry; RT-PCR = reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction; S gene = spike gene.