| Literature DB >> 33194778 |
Max Maurin1,2.
Abstract
Tularemia is a zoonotic disease caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis. The predominant sources, routes of infection, and clinical manifestations of human infections greatly vary according to the geographic area considered. Moreover, clinical suspicion of tularemia is often tricky because of the lack of specificity of the clinical manifestations. Because F. tularensis isolation is tedious and detection of its DNA usually requires removal of infected tissues, serological techniques are most often used for diagnostic confirmation. However, these techniques are varied and poorly standardized. The microagglutination test (MAT), the indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA), and ELISA tests are currently the most frequently used techniques. These home-made and commercial tests are mainly used for tularemia diagnosis but also seroprevalence studies. ELISA tests detect specific antibodies within two weeks of disease evaluation, compared to 2-3 weeks for MAT and IFA. However, more false-positive results are usually reported with ELISA. The long-term persistence of anti-F. tularensis antibodies in patients with past tularemia infection hampers the diagnostic specificity of all these tests. Also, cross-reacting antibodies have been described (especially with Brucella and Yersinia species), although usually at a low level. The immunoblotting technique can highlight these serological cross-reactions. Tularemia remains an underdiagnosed disease in most endemic areas, and the clinical presentations of this disease are evolving. It is necessary to improve further speed and accuracy of tularemia diagnosis, as well as the standardization of diagnostic procedures.Entities:
Keywords: Francisella tularensis; diagnosis; serological diagnosis; serological methods; tularemia
Year: 2020 PMID: 33194778 PMCID: PMC7649319 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.512090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Homemade methods used for titration antibodies directed against F. tularensis antigens.
| Method | F. tularensis strain | Antigen | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| TAT | LVS (BB IND 157) | formalin-inactivated bacteria | ( |
| MAT | Ootake tick strain | formalin-inactivated and safranine-stained bacteria | ( |
| LVS (ATCC 29648) | methanol-fixed bacteria | ( | |
| LVS (BB IND 157) | formalin-inactivated bacteria | ( | |
| hare type B strain | formalin-inactivated and safranine-stained bacteria | ( | |
| human type B strain | NA | ( | |
| LVS | formalin-inactivated and safranine-stained bacteria | ( | |
| LVS | formalin-inactivated and safranine-stained bacteria | ( | |
| LVS | formalin-inactivated bacteria | ( | |
| LVS (NCTC 10857) | formalin-inactivated bacteria | ( | |
| LAT | Ft | formalin-inactivated and sonicated bacteria | ( |
| IFA | LVS (ATCC 29648) | methanol-fixed bacteria | ( |
| human type B strain | formalin-inactivated bacteria | ( | |
| ELISA | LVS | Lipopolysaccharide extract | ( |
| NA | formalin-inactivated and sonicated bacteria | ( | |
| LVS (BB IND 157) | formalin-inactivated and sonicated bacteria | ( | |
| LVS (BB IND 157) | Bacterial sonicate | ( | |
| LVS (ATCC 29648) | Lipopolysaccharide extract | ( | |
| LVS (ATCC29684) | Lipopolysaccharide extract | ( | |
| CF-ELISA | LVS (BB IND 157) | formalin-inactivated and sonicated bacteria | ( |
| cELISA | hare type B strain (NVF1) | Lipopolysaccharide extract | ( |
| ICT | NA | Lipopolysaccharide extract (Micromun ®) | ( |
TAT, tube agglutination test; MAT, microagglutination tests; LAT, latex agglutination test; IFA, immunofluorescence assay; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; CF-ELISA, complement-fixing ELISA; cELISA, competitive ELISA; ICT, immunochromatographic assay; LVS, live vaccine strain.
Reported overall sensitivities and specificities for homemade and commercial tularemia serological tests.
| Method | References | Number of patients/controls (sera) | Detected antibodies | Cutoff titers | Sensitivity | Specificity | Tularemia case definition or gold standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TAT | ( | 50 (141)/none | mainly IgM | ≥10 | 85.1% | NA | Clinically typical + positive serology |
| ≥80 | 67.4% | NA | |||||
| MAT | ( | 70 (70)/none | mainly IgM | ≥80 | 95.7% | NA | ≥4fold rise in MAT |
| ( | 205 (205)/none | mainly IgM | ≥80 | 94.1% | NA | CCF + positive culture (10) or MAT ≥ 1:20 | |
| ≥160 | 85% | NA | |||||
| ( | 50 (50)/50 (50) | mainly IgM | >16 | 100% | 100% | CCF + seroconversion | |
| ≥64 | 92% | 100% | |||||
| ( | 93 (129)/281 (287) | mainly IgM | ≥160 | 50.5% | 99.3% | CCF + positive culture or PCR, or MAT or IFA ≥ 160, or seroconversion or ≥4fold rise in antibody titers | |
| ( | 42 culture-confirmed | mainly IgM | ≥160 | 97.6% | Positive culture | ||
| ( | 19 (34)/50 (50) | mainly IgM | ≥10 | 82.4% | 100% | ≥4fold rise in TAT or MAT titers | |
| ( | 74 (122)/134 (134) | mainly IgM | ≥80 | 75.3% | 98.5% | CCF + positive culture or PCR, or seroconversion, or ≥4fold rise in antibody titers | |
| LAT | ( | 77/309 | mainly IgM | ≥25 | 98.7% | 100% | TAT and ELISA |
| IFA | ( | 50 (50)/50 (50) | all | >80 | 100% | 92% | same as MAT |
| >320 | 94% | 100% | |||||
| ( | 93 (129)/281 (287) | IgM | ≥160 | 49.4% | 99.3% | same as MAT | |
| IgG | ≥160 | 77.4% | 98.6% | ||||
| ( | 74 (122)/134 (134) | IgM | ≥80 | 72.5% | 99.3% | same as MAT | |
| IgG | ≥160 | 74.5% | 99.3% | ||||
| ELISA | ( | 28 (28)/48 (48) | all | ≥500 units | 96.4% | 97.9% |
|
| ( | 70 (70, first two weeks of evolution) /none | IgM | OD ≥ mean | 21.4% | NA | same as MAT | |
| IgA | 28.6% | NA | |||||
| IgG | 35.7% | NA | |||||
| at least one | 43% | NA | |||||
| ( | 50 (91)/none | IgM | ≥100 units | 83.5% | NA | same as TAT | |
| IgA | 80.2% | NA | |||||
| IgG | 87.9% | NA | |||||
| ( | 44 (44)/50 (50) | IgM | OD ≥ mean+ 3SD of controls | 97.5% | 100% | CCF + MAT ≥ 80 | |
| IgA | 97.5% | 100% | |||||
| IgG | 97.5% | 100% | |||||
| ( | 50 (50)/50 (50) | all | OD > 0.648 | 100% | 98% | same as MAT | |
| OD > 0.780 | 98% | 100% | |||||
| ( | 75 (75)/1,149 (1,149) | IgM | OD > mean+ 3SD of controls | 89.3% | 99.5% | Clinically evident tularemia cases | |
| IgA | 96% | 98.9% | |||||
| IgG | 85.3% | 98.2% | |||||
| at least one | 99% | 97.1% | |||||
| ( | 19 (34)/50 (50) | all | OD ≥ 0.61 | 94.1% | 98% | same as MAT | |
| ( | 110 (135)/168 (168) | all | OD ≥ 0.18 | 95.6% | 76.6% | Positive MAT | |
| CF-ELISA | ( | 50 (91)/none | all | ≥100 units | 81.9% | NA | same as TAT |
| cELISA | ( | 19 (34)/50 (50) | all | 8.5% rate of inhibition | 97.1% | 100% | same as MAT |
| Serazym ® ELISA | ( | 110 (135)/168 (168) | all | (M) | 97% | 91.5% | same as ELISA |
| Serion ® ELISA | ( | 110 (135)/168 (168) | IgM | OD ≥ 0.449 (M) | 94.8% | 96.8% | same as ELISA |
| IgG | OD ≥ 0.619 (M) | 96.3% | 96.8% | ||||
| ( | 74 (122)/134 (134) | IgM | OD ≥ 0.449 (M) | 88.2% | 94.8% | same as MAT | |
| IgG | OD ≥ 0.619 (M) | 86.3% | 95.5% | ||||
| IgM | OD ≥ 0.9 | 86.3% | 97.8% | ||||
| IgG | OD ≥ 1.4 | 84.3% | 97.8% | ||||
| ICT | ( | 50 (58)/58 (58) | IgG mainly | Visual | 98.3% | 96.6% | Positive MAT |
| Virapid ® ICT | ( | 106 (203)/236 (236) | all | ≥0.5 visual Intensity | 99.3% | 94.6% | same as MAT |
| 42 culture-confirmed | 97.6% | same as MAT | |||||
| ( | 110 (135)/168 (168) | 97% | 84% | same as ELISA | |||
| ( | 74 (122)/134 (134) | 90% | 83.6% | same as MAT |
TAT, tube agglutination test; MAT, microagglutination tests; LAT, latex agglutination test; IFA, immunofluorescence assay; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; CF-ELISA, complement-fixing ELISA; cELISA, competitive ELISA; ICT, immunochromatographic assay; CCF, compatible clinical findings; (M), manufacturer cutoff titer.
Reported sensitivities for homemade and commercial tularemia serological tests according to disease evolution.
| References | Method | Antibody types | Cutoff titers | Sensitivity at different time intervals of disease onset for (n) serum samples | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| ||||
| ( | ELISA | all | ≥500 relative titer | 15.8% | 50% | 96% |
|
|
|
| ||||
| ( | TAT | mainly IgM | ≥10 | 7.1% | 65% | 97.8% |
| mainly IgM | ≥80 | 0% | 15% | 71.7% | ||
| CF-ELISA | all | ≥100 | 18.2% | 70% | 88% | |
| ELISA | IgM | ≥100 | 18.2% | 75% | 90% | |
| IgA | 9.1% | 58.3% | 90% | |||
| IgG | 36.4% | 91.7% | 90% | |||
| At least one | 36.4% | 91.7% | 96.7% | |||
|
|
| |||||
| ( | MAT | mainly IgM | ≥10 | 65% | 89% | |
| mainly IgM | ≥80 | 3% | 52% | |||
| ELISA | IgM | ≥100 | 29% | 71% | ||
| IgA | ≥100 | 23% | 89% | |||
| IgG | ≥100 | 29% | 93% | |||
| At least one | ≥100 | 48% | 100% | |||
|
|
|
| ||||
| ( | Virapid ® ICT | All | ≥0.5 visual density | 20% | 67.4% | 96.1% |
|
|
|
| ||||
| ( | MAT | all | ≥80 | 0% | 33.3% | 75% |
| IFA | IgM | ≥80 | 0% | 33.3% | 62.5% | |
| IgG | ≥160 | 0% | 0% | 87.5% | ||
| Serion ® ELISA | IgM | OD ≥ 0.45 | 14.3% | 66.7% | 100% | |
| OD ≥ 0.9 | 14.3% | 66.7% | 100% | |||
| IgG | OD ≥ 0.62 | 0% | 66.7% | 100% | ||
| OD ≥ 1.4 | 0% | 33.3% | 100% | |||
| Virapid ® ICT | all | + to +++ | 14.3% | 33.3% | 100% | |
TAT, tube agglutination test; MAT, microagglutination tests; LAT, latex agglutination test; IFA, immunofluorescence assay; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; CF-ELISA, complement-fixing ELISA; ICT, immunochromatographic assay.
Reported tularemia seroprevalence in the general population or specific at-risk groups.
| Reference | Country | Year of serum sampling* | Population | Serological test (cutoff titer) | Seroprevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Finland (Oulu province) | 1,072 healthy blood donors | TAT (≥80) | 0.7% | |
| ( | Canada (Quebec City area) | 1992 | 165 trappers (95.2% men, | LAT (≥20) | 2.4% |
| ( | USA (Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts) | 2001 | 132 landscapers | MAT (≥128) | 9.1% |
| 310 healthy residents | 0.3% | ||||
| ( | Spain (Castilla y Léon region) | 1996 | 4,825 people (48.4% men, mean | MAT (≥20) | 0.19% |
| ( | Germany | 6,617 people aged 18 | ELISA (NA) | 0.23% | |
| ( | Germany | 1,140 healthy adults | ELISA (NA) | 0.3% | |
| ( | Canada (Lake Mistassini, Quebec province) | 50 Cree community people | TAT (≥80) | 4% (men, 9.1%, | |
| ( | Germany | 286 hunters | ELISA (NA) and | 1.7% | |
| ( | Germany (Leutkirch, | 2,416 people living in urban areas | ELISA (NA) and | 2.32% | |
| ( | Azerbaijan | 2008 | 796 people (43.6% men; mean age, | ELISA (NA) | 15.5% |
| ( | Slovakia | 124 healthy blood donors | ELISA (NA) and | 4% | |
| ( | Austria | 546 people (226 soldiers and | Serion ® ELISA | civilians, 0.7% | |
| ( | Finland | 2000 | 1,045 people (national survey; | ELISA (NA) and | 2% |
| ( | Turkey (Kars region, Eastern Anatolia) | 201 people (88.6% men; 103 farmers, | MAT and | 7.5% | |
| ( | Turkey (Manisa province, Aegean region) | 2012 | 450 people (48.1% men; | Serion ® ELISA | 7.1% (women, 9.5%; men, 4.5%) |
| ( | Belgium (Wallonia) | 2011 | 148 people at risk for zoonoses | Serion ® ELISA | 2% |
| 209 blood donors living in rural areas | 0.5% | ||||
| 193 blood donors living in urban areas | 0.5% | ||||
| ( | Kenya (northeastern, Garissa and Wajir hospitals) | 2014 | 730 febrile hospitalized patients | Serazym ® ELISA | 3.7% |
| ( | Georgia | 2014 | 500 healthy military personnel | MAT (≥128) | 2% |
| 2013 | 697 people (44.5% men; rural areas) | 5.02% (men, 6.45%; women, 3.88%) | |||
| ( | USA (Devils Tower National Monument park, Wyoming, USA) | 2015 | 23 persons working in the park | MAT (≥128) | 13% |
| ( | Iran (Kurdistan province) | 2011 | 250 people (82% men; mean age, 40.1 | Serion ® ELISA | 14.4% (hunters, 18%; |
| ( | Iran (Sistan and Baluchestan province) | 2011 | 184 people (100% men; 120 butchers | Serion ® ELISA | 6.5% (butchers, 5%; |
| ( | Iran (Ilam province) | 2015 | 360 people (76.3% men; rural, 44.7%; | Serion ® ELISA | 2.8% (Farmers, 7.6%; |
*. The year of serum sampling is not specified in many studies. We considered that, in most cases, it was close to the year of the corresponding publication. TAT, tube agglutination test; MAT, microagglutination tests; LAT, latex agglutination test; IFA, immunofluorescence assay; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; ICT, immunochromatographic assay.