| Literature DB >> 35456070 |
Jane E Sykes1, Krystle L Reagan1, Jarlath E Nally2, Renee L Galloway3, David A Haake4,5.
Abstract
A One Health approach to the epidemiology, management, surveillance, and control of leptospirosis relies on accessible and accurate diagnostics that can be applied to humans and companion animals and livestock. Diagnosis should be multifaceted and take into account exposure risk, clinical presentation, and multiple direct and/or indirect diagnostic approaches. Methods of direct detection of Leptospira spp. include culture, histopathology and immunostaining of tissues or clinical specimens, and nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs). Indirect serologic methods to detect leptospiral antibodies include the microscopic agglutination test (MAT), the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and lateral flow methods. Rapid diagnostics that can be applied at the point-of-care; NAAT and lateral flow serologic tests are essential for management of acute infection and control of outbreaks. Culture is essential to an understanding of regional knowledge of circulating strains, and we discuss recent improvements in methods for cultivation, genomic sequencing, and serotyping. We review the limitations of NAATs, MAT, and other diagnostic approaches in the context of our expanding understanding of the diversity of pathogenic Leptospira spp. Novel approaches are needed, such as loop mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) and clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)-based approaches to leptospiral nucleic acid detection.Entities:
Keywords: Leptospira; One Health; diagnosis; disease management; enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; epidemiology; infection control; leptospirosis; nucleic acid amplification techniques; serology
Year: 2022 PMID: 35456070 PMCID: PMC9032781 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11040395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Factors important in the epidemiology of leptospirosis. Organisms are shed in the urine of domestic and wildlife reservoir hosts, with rodents being the most significant reservoir host globally. Clinical illness occurs in humans and dogs when they are exposed to infected reservoir hosts or to organisms that persist in contaminated soil or water. Outbreaks may therefore be associated with flooding and increases in the rodent population. Prevention of the disease depends on accurate detection of infection using an array of diagnostic tests, and implementation of appropriate management strategies (such as control of reservoir hosts, appropriate treatment, vaccination of dogs and livestock).
Figure 2Kinetics of leptospiral infection and corresponding diagnostic tools. Infection with Leptospira spp. results in leptospiremia 2–20 days after exposure and leptospiruria approximately one week later. In some hosts, persistent infection of the renal tubules leads to persistent or waxing and waning urinary shedding or organisms. Leptospira antibodies are produced after 1 week of infection and can persist for months to years. Bacterial culture or molecular detection of leptospiral DNA can be utilized when bacteria are likely to be present in the collected specimen depending on the course of disease. Antibody detection assays, including the microscopic agglutination test, are often negative in the first week of infection; therefore, paired sera collected during the acute phase and 1–2 weeks later are recommended. Adapted from “Time Course of COVID-19 Infection and Test Positivity”, by BioRender.com (2021). Retrieved from https://app.biorender.com/biorender-templates (accessed 11 April 2021).
Advantages and Disadvantages of Diagnostic Assays Available for Leptospirosis.
| Assay | Specimen Type | Target | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Darkfield microscopy | Urine | Low sensitivity and specificity. Requires considerable technical expertise to interpret correctly. | |
| Culture | Whole blood, urine | Leptospires | Special media required. Although sensitivity has historically been considered low and prolonged incubation times have been required, recent improvements in media have been associated with increased yields and shorter incubation times. |
| Microscopic agglutination test | Serum | Antibodies against various leptospiral serovars | False negatives can occur early in the course of illness or with immunosuppression, or when panels are used with limited numbers of serovars. False positives can occur with a history of vaccination in animals or with previous exposure. Paired titers performed at the same laboratory generally required for diagnosis. Inter-laboratory variation in results may occur. |
| Rapid diagnostic chromatographic or ELISA based tests | Serum or plasma | IgM or IgG against | False negatives can occur early in the course of illness or with immunosuppression. False positives can occur with a history of vaccination in animals or with previous exposure. Weak positive results can be difficult to read. No information in infecting serogroup. |
| Histopathology | Kidney tissue collected via biopsy or necropsy | Leptospires | Organisms may be visualized with silver stains, immunohistochemistry, or fluorescence in situ hybridization. Antimicrobial therapy may lead to false-negative results. |
| Nucleic acid amplification tests | Blood, urine, CSF, tissue specimens | Sensitivity and specificity unclear and may vary between assays offered by different laboratories. Antimicrobial therapy may lead to negative results. A positive result from a urine specimen may not have etiologic predictive value because of the potential for subclinical carriage. |