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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2000, p. 2348-2353, Vol. 38, No. 6
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
North Carolina 275991; New England
Research Institute, Watertown, Massachusetts
024722; University of Washington,
Seattle, Washington 981043; Cleveland
Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio 441954;
Rush-Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago, Illinois
606125; University of Southern
California, Los Angeles, California 900336;
Walter Reed Army Hospital, Rockville, Maryland
208527; Children's National Medical
Center, Washington, D.C. 200108; and
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development,
Rockville, Maryland 208929
Received 22 November 1999/Returned for modification 23 February
2000/Accepted 15 March 2000
We have evaluated two commercially available kits (AMPLICOR MONITOR
[Roche] and NASBA HIV-1 QT or NucliSens HIV-1 QT [Organon Teknika])
and two noncommercial methods for the accurate quantitation of human
immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) RNA in seminal plasma. The same
panels of coded specimens were tested on four separate occasions.
Laboratories using the commercial assays employed silica beads to
isolate HIV-1 RNA, which removed inhibitory factors sometimes found in
seminal plasma. Sensitivities and specificities, respectively, for each
assay were as follows: AMPLICOR MONITOR, 100 and 73%; NASBA HIV-1 QT,
84 and 100%; NucliSens HIV-1 QT, 99 and 98%; and noncommercial
assays, 91 and 73%. When results from the laboratory that was
inexperienced with the silica bead extraction method were excluded from
the analysis, specificity for the Roche assay increased to 100%. The
commercial assays demonstrated highly reproducible results, with
intra-assay standard deviations (measured in log10 RNA
copies/milliliter of seminal plasma) ranging from 0.11 to 0.32; those
of the noncommercial assays ranged from 0.12 to 0.75. Differences in
mean estimated HIV-1 RNA concentrations were
0095-1137/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Multicenter Evaluation of Methods To Quantitate
Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 RNA in Seminal Plasma

0.67 log10
and were greater at low viral loads. Suspension matrices that used
blood plasma or seminal plasma did not make a difference in recovery of
HIV-1 RNA, which suggested that blood plasma specimens can be used as
external controls for seminal plasma assays. More variation in the
HIV-1 RNA viral loads was observed in the seminal plasma values than in
the blood plasma values when paired specimens from HIV-1-infected men
were tested. Quantitation of HIV-1 RNA in seminal plasma can be
reliably accomplished using two commercially available assays, and may
be incorporated into the evaluations of HIV-1 seropositive men enrolled
in clinical studies.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, CB# 7140, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7140. Phone: (919) 966-6872. Fax: (919) 966-9873. E-mail: fiscussa{at}med.unc.edu.
Present address: Diagnostic Products Corp., Los Angeles, Calif.
Other members of the AIDS Clinical Trials Group Genital Secretions
Working Group include Deborah Anderson (Harvard University, Boston,
Mass.), Yvonne Bryson (University of California at Los Angeles),
Lisa Frenkel (University of Washington, Seattle), David Katzenstein
(Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.), Phillip LaRussa (Columbia
University, New York, N.Y.), Jeffrey Lennox (Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.), William A. Meyer III (Quest Diagnostics, Inc., Baltimore, Md.), Cheryl Michels (Data Works Development, Inc., Seattle, Wash.), and Walter Scott (University of Miami, Miami, Fla.).
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