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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, January 2002, p. 165-171, Vol. 40, No. 1
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.1.165-171.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Evaluation of Four Commercial Immunoglobulin G (IgG)- and IgM-Specific Enzyme Immunoassays for Diagnosis of Mycoplasma pneumoniae Infections
J. Petitjean,* A. Vabret, S. Gouarin, and F. Freymuth
Laboratory of Human and Molecular Virology, University Hospital, 14033 Caen, France
Received 13 July 2001/
Returned for modification 21 August 2001/
Accepted 18 October 2001

ABSTRACT
The four following commercially available enzyme immunoassays
(EIAs) were assessed and compared for their performance in detecting
Mycoplasma pneumoniae immunoglobulin G (IgG)- and IgM-specific
antibodies Platelia EIA, ImmunoWELL
M. pneumoniae ELISA IgG
and IgM, ETI-MP-IgG and IgM EIAs and Biotest anti-
M. pneumoniae IgG and IgM ELISA (referred to herein as EIA-Platelia, EIA-BMD,
EIA-Sorin, and EIA-Biotest). Three groups of patients were investigated:
39 patients (27 children and 12 adults) with respiratory infections
who tested positive by PCR for
M. pneumoniae in respiratory
specimens (group I; 52 serum samples), 61 healthy children and
adults (group II; 61 serum samples), and 20 patients with rheumatoid
factor or antinuclear antibodies, or who tested positive for
antiviral IgM (group III; 20 serum samples). In group III, the
IgM specificity for EIA-Platelia, EIA-BMD, EIA-Biotest, and
EIA-Sorin was 100, 90, 65, and 25%, respectively. In the children
from group I, the four EIAs had similar IgM sensitivities (89
to 92%); the sensitivity for IgG was greater with EIA-BMD and
EIA-Biotest than with EIA-Platelia and EIA-Sorin (66 and 78%
versus 55 and 52%, respectively). In adult patients from group
I, 9 to 10 serum samples were positive for IgG with a concordant
sensitivity of 75 to 83% between the four EIAs but a striking
difference in IgM sensitivity: 16% by EIA-Platelia and EIA-BMD,
50% by EIA-Biotest, and 58% by EIA-Sorin. Discrepant and unexpected
results were observed in IgM detection from control healthy
patients using EIA-Sorin and EIA-Biotest, confirming the lack
of specificity of these two EIAs and making them inaccurate
for routine diagnosis. A good concordance of IgG seroprevalence
in healthy adults was found between the four EIAs (66 to 70%),
though this concordance was lower with EIA-Platelia (43%). In
healthy children, EIA-BMD and EIA-Biotest gave a higher IgG
seroprevalence than EIA-Sorin and EIA-Platelia (45% each for
the former compared to 17 and 20%, respectively, for the latter).
These results confirm that the IgM EIA serology test is a valuable
tool for the early diagnosis of
M. pneumoniae infections in
children, as long as the EIA used is specific. In adults, the
difficult interpretation of EIAs suggests that paired sera,
combined with PCR detection on respiratory tract specimens collected
on admission of patient, should be required for accurate diagnosis.

INTRODUCTION
Mycoplasma pneumoniae is a common respiratory pathogen responsible
for mild acute respiratory infections such as sore throats,
pharyngitis, and tracheobronchitis in younger children. It is
the most common cause of primary atypical pneumonia resistant
to ß-lactam antibiotics in older children and young
adults (
5,
10,
15).
M. pneumoniae can also be associated with
severe extrapulmonary complications (
9,
21,
24). The standard
laboratory methods for the specific diagnosis of
M. pneumoniae infection have been isolation in culture and serological methods.
Culture is time-consuming and relatively insensitive. The conventional
complement fixation test (CFT) using a glycolipid antigen gives
unspecific reactions and lacks sensitivity (
16,
19). Alternative
tests have recently been developed to obtain more-accurate and
prompt diagnosis: indirect enzyme immunoassay (EIA) measuring
separately immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgM class antibodies (
8,
14,
27,
33,
35) and PCR for rapid and sensitive detection of
M. pneumoniae in respiratory tract specimens (
1,
4,
6,
31,
32,
36). The objective of this retrospective study was to compare
the performance of four commercially available EIAs for the
detection of specific
M. pneumoniae IgG and IgM antibodies in
assessing the antibody response of suspected
M. pneumoniae patients
on the basis of PCR-positive results for
M. pneumoniae in respiratory
samples. Furthermore, we evaluated the ability of the serological
tests to accurately establish an earlier serodiagnosis of
M. pneumoniae infections.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Patients and controls.
For a 4-year period, January 1997 through December 2000, 39
patients (group I: 27 children and 12 adults), admitted to Caens
hospital with clinical features of upper or lower respiratory
tract infection consistent with
M. pneumoniae infection, were
retrospectively selected on the basis of a specific
M. pneumoniae-positive
PCR in respiratory tract samples. Serum specimens and respiratory
tract specimens were obtained on admission from all 39 patients.
In addition, serum specimens were obtained 5 to 22 days later
from 13 patients. Upon their receipt, the 52 serum samples were
serologically investigated for
M. pneumonia-specific IgM and
IgG antibodies by the Platelia EIAs IgG and IgM (Diagnostica
Pasteur Sanofi) (referred to herein as EIA-Platelia) and were
subsequently stored frozen at -20°C until required for testing.
A control group consisting of 61 single serum samples from healthy individuals matched for age and sex (group II: 40 children and 21 adults) was included in the study. Furthermore, the specificity of the four EIAs was assessed by using 20 additional serum samples (group III): 2 serum samples positive for rheumatoid factor (RF), 2 serum samples positive for antinuclear antibodies (ANAs), and 16 serum samples from serologically proven cases of recent viral infections (5 heterophil-positive infectious mononucleosis-positive infections, 2 IgM cytomegalovirus infections, 2 IgM viral capsid antigen Epstein-Barr virus infections, 2 IgM hepatitis A virus infections, 2 IgM herpes simplex virus infections, 1 IgM varicella-zoster virus infection, 1 IgM measles virus infection, and 1 IgM mumps virus infection). Sera for all three groups were thawed and tested by the four EIAs; the acute- and convalescent-phase serum specimens were tested for IgG and IgM in the same run.
PCR for M. pneumoniae.
Respiratory tract specimens, five bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples, 14 throat swabs, and 19 nasal aspirates were examined for M. pneumoniae by PCR on the admission of the patient. Nucleic acids were extracted by a Chelex procedure. A 250-µl specimen in transport medium (200 mM sucrose phosphate for throat specimens, Eagle minimal essential medium for nasal aspirates and BAL samples) was carefully mixed with 150 µl of a suspension containing 20% Chelex 100 (Bio-Rad, Marnes-la-Coquette, France) in 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 1% Nonidet P-40, and 1% Tween 20 aqueous solution. The mixture was then heated to 100°C for 15 min and centrifuged at 12,000 x g for 10 min. The supernatant was directly used for PCR with P1 gene-specific primers MP-P11 and MP-P12 (6). The PCR amplification products were detected by hybridization with a biotinylated M. pneumoniae-specific probe, MP-I (6), in a DNA EIA (GEN-ETI-K DEIA; Sorin). An index value was defined as optical density (OD) sample value/OD cutoff value. A positive hybridization signal was considered positive if the index value was
2. To identify possible false-negative results caused by inhibitory factors in the specimens, control amplification of each DNA extract with human ß-globin primers GH20 and PCO4 were performed in separate tubes (28). A positive signal was defined by a 268-bp fragment visualized on an ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel. A positive control and negative controls (sterile water, DNA-free extraction mixture, and DNA-free PCR mixture) were systematically treated identically to the samples throughout. The results of M. pneumoniae PCR were considered only when DNA was found to be amplified with ß-globin-specific primers and when no hybridization signal was detected with negative controls. To minimize the risk of contamination, DNA extraction, PCR setup, and product analysis were each carried out in separate rooms.
Commercial EIAs.
The four commercially available EIAs contained all reagents to be used and were performed using the protocols supplied with each kit. Negative and positive control sera were included for each run to validate the test quality. The interpretation of the results was performed after assay validation defined for each test.
(i) EIA-Platelia.
IgG antibodies to M. pneumoniae were detected by the Platelia indirect EIA (Sanofi Diagnostica Pasteur). In this test, the antigen solution used to coat the microplate was a solubilized ultrasonicate of an M. pneumoniae culture containing a high proportion of membrane proteins. The specimen arbitrary unit (AU) values were determined from the calibration curve and were interpreted as follows. A value of <10 AU/ml for a single serum specimen was considered insignificant, a value of 10 to 19 AU/ml was considered low, a value of 20 to 39 AU/ml was considered moderate, and a value of >40 AU/ml was considered high.
IgM antibodies to M. pneumoniae were detected by the Platelia M. pneumonia IgM EIA. This test is a double-sandwich immunoenzymatic assay with capture of the serum IgM antibodies on the solid phase (microplate coated with human anti-µ chain antibodies).
(ii) EIA-BMD.
ImmunoWELL M. pneumoniae ELISA IgG and IgM (BMD s.a.) (referred to herein as EIA-BMD) was performed as in indirect EIAs, using a purified M. pneumoniae glycolipid (strain FH) as the antigen. For IgM titration, diluted controls and specimens were initially absorbed with a human anti-IgG solution in order to prevent interference due to RF or residual human IgG. The titers of IgG and IgM in the serum were calculated as the ratio of sample absorbance value to calibrator absorbance value that is then multiplied by the value assigned (in arbitrary units per milliliter) to the positive calibrator. The result was then interpreted as follows: titers for M. pneumoniae IgG were considered insignificant if they measured less than 200 AU/ml, low if they were between 200 and 320 AU/ml, and highly significant if they were higher than 320 AU/ml. The corresponding IgM cutoffs were
770, 770 to 950, and >950 AU/ml.
(iii) EIA-Sorin.
The ETI-M. pneumoniae IgG and IgM EIAs (Diasorin, Antony, France) (referred to herein as EIA-Sorin) use a microtiter plate coated with a preparation of purified membrane protein as the antigen, including the immunodominant cytoadhesin P1. For IgM antibody detection, the sera were diluted to 1/105 with a solution of human anti-IgG in order to rule out residual human IgG. The ODs of samples were transformed to arbitrary units determined from the calibration curve (10, 50, and 100 AU/ml), and the corresponding titers of the serum were interpreted, as indicated by the manufacturer, as follows: a titer of less than 10 AU/ml was considered insignificant, a value of 10 to 50 AU/ml was considered a significant titer of specific antibodies, and a value of
50 AU/ml was considered a high titer.
(iiii) EIA-Biotest.
The Biotest anti-M. pneumoniae IgG and IgM ELISA (Biotest AG, Buc, Germany) kit (referred to herein as EIA-Biotest) contains microtiter reaction wells that were precoated with an ultrasonicated purified homogeneous antigen. The cutoff value was calculated as the absorbance of the negative control (OD value < 0.100) plus mean value of all cutoff controls, and the cutoff range was defined (cutoff value ± 10%). The titer of the patient sera may be determined from a semiquantitative curve obtained with the calculated cutoff value and a titrated positive control.

RESULTS
The cutoff values established by the manufacturer were used
for interpretation of results of the four IgM and IgG EIAs.
Concerning the IgG and IgM EIA-BMD, IgG and IgM EIA-Biotest,
and IgM EIA-Platelia, the uneasy definition of an EIA end point
has been dealt with by the designation of an "equivocal" or
"low-positive" range. In the interpretation of the results,
when a single serum sample was tested, equivocal or low-positive
results were considered to be negative, whereas in a paired
serum sample, they were considered positive if they became positive
when the second serum sample was tested.
Specificity of the assays.
The specificity of the assays was assessed on sera from group III. The different EIA results are presented in Table 1 as the number of individuals who were IgM positive. EIA-Platelia appears to be the most specific method for demonstrating M. pneumoniae IgM antibody; none of the RF, ANAs, or IgM antiviral positive sera were positive by IgM EIA-Platelia (specificity, 100%). Specificities of EIA-BMD, EIA-Biotest, and EIA-Sorin were, respectively, 90, 65, and 25%.
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TABLE 1. Specificities of four EIAs for 20 serum specimens from patients positive for RF, ANA, or anti-viral IgM (group III)
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Specific IgG and IgM determination in sera from 39 patients with M. pneumoniae infection.
From 39 patients with a positive
M. pneumoniae PCR (group I),
acute- and available convalescent-phase sera (from 13 out of
the 39 patients) were examined for specific IgG and IgM detection
by the four EIA assays. The diagnostic performance of the four
EIAs are shown in Table
2. In children, the four EIAs detected
IgM antibodies from 24 to 25 patients, giving a concordant sensitivity
of 89 to 92%, but the sensitivity of the EIA-BMD and the EIA-Biotest
IgG test were greater (66 and 78%, respectively) than those
of the EIA-Platelia and the EIA-Sorin IgG test (55 and 52%,
respectively). In adult patients, we observed a concordant IgG
sensitivity of 75 to 83% but a striking difference in IgM sensitivity:
16% by EIA-Platelia and EIA-BMD, 50% by EIA-Biotest, and 58%
by EIA-Sorin.
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TABLE 2. Sensitivities of EIAs for detection of M. pneumoniae IgG and IgM antibodies in sera from 39 patients with positive M. pneumoniae PCR results (group I)
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Particular attention was paid to the four EIA serological results
from the 13 patients with paired sera from patients with proved
M. pneumoniae infection (Table
3). Both in adults and children,
the overall IgG sensitivities were 61% for the EIA-BMD and the
EIA-Biotest, 31% for the EIA-Sorin, and 15% for the EIA-Platelia
with the acute-phase serum specimens, whereas a similar IgG
sensitivity was observed by the four EIAs with the convalescent-phase
serum specimens. In IgM detection in acute-phase serum samples,
EIA-Sorin and EIA-Biotest were globally more sensitive than
EIA-Platelia and EIA-BMD (46 and 61% versus 15 and 31%), but
the results were slightly different between adults and children.
There was a good concordance between IgM detection in acute-
and convalescent-phase sera in children but, in adult patients,
the sensitivities were very high for EIA-Sorin (29 and 57%)
and EIA-Biotest (57 and 71%) compared to EIA-Platelia and EIA-BMD
(0 and 14% for both).
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TABLE 3. Sensitivities of four M. pneumoniae EIAs in 13 pairs of acute- and convalescent-phase serum samples from patients with positive M. pneumoniae PCR results (group I)
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Although a good correlation was found between PCR results and
serology, negative serological tests with a positive PCR result
were obtained in five adults and one child (Table
4). None of
the sera from the four patients with paired sera (patients 1,
2, 3, and 4) showed a seroconversion or a significant increase
in the IgG titer. Equivocal IgM titer was found by EIA-BMD in
single serum sample from adult patient 5, and equivocal IgG
titer and low IgG titer were, respectively, found by EIA-Biotest
and EIA-BMD in a single serum sample from patient 6; these serological
results were uninterpretable without convalescent-phase serum
samples collected 8 to 15 days later.
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TABLE 4. Results obtained in six patients with positive M. pneumoniae PCR results without positive serological criteria in the four EIAs
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Control group seroprevalence.
Out of the 61 healthy patients (group II), depending on the
EIA used, 17 to 33 (28 to 54%) were IgG positive and 1 to 45
(1.6 to 74%) were IgM positive (Table
5). There was a good concordance
in adult IgG seroprevalence (66 to 71%), though it was lower
by EIA-Platelia (43%). In children, EIA-BMD and EIA-Biotest
gave a higher seroprevalence than EIA-Sorin and EIA-Platelia
(45% for both versus 17 and 20%). A comparative assessment of
the amount of specific IgG antibodies in the 61 control serum
specimens was undertaken with the four EIAs, using the Spearman
correlation (Fig.
1). All six correlations were highly significant
(
P < 0.001). Most correlation coefficients were as high as
0.71 to 0.86, but weaker coefficients (0.58 and 0.59) were found
between EIA-BMD titers and those of either EIA-Platelia or EIA-Sorin.
Several sera contained high levels of IgG in the EIA-BMD but
low levels of IgG when tested by EIA-Platelia or EIA-Sorin.
This is of particular interest in the specific definition of
the EIA cutoff of each EIA.
Discrepant and unexpected results were observed in IgM detection.
One (1.6%) to 45 (74%) subjects were IgM positive with an incredibly
high IgM EIA-Sorin seroprevalence in adults and children (57
and 82%, respectively) (Table
5).

DISCUSSION
In
M. pneumoniae infection, it is difficult to set up criteria
for the "gold standard" to detect acute or remote infections.
Cultural isolation is 100% specific but lacks sensitivity and
is too slow to be of timely diagnostic value. There is no universally
agreed upon gold standard serological assay for detection of
antibodies to
M. pneumoniae. CFT measures IgM and IgG antibodies
together and has been shown to be both nonspecific and insensitive.
Several EIAs have been developed in recent years; they include
assays for the determination of both specific IgG and IgM or
for IgG only and assays for IgM only (
8,
14,
33,
34,
35). The
µ-capture ELISA has previously been found to have a high
sensitivity and specificity. It has been validated for early
diagnosis of
M. pneumoniae infection (
13,
23,
37,
39). Although
IgM EIAs are more sensitive and specific than CFT, the IgM response
may be nonspecific (
3,
19,
26,
29) or absent, particularly in
the elderly with reinfection (
2,
14,
22,
23,
30,
33,
37). It
has also been shown that healthy people often have a relatively
high background of specific
M. pneumoniae IgG antibodies in
their sera, probably because of past
M. pneumoniae infections
(
2,
8,
14,
22,
25,
34,
35). Therefore, paired sera obtained
with a time interval of 1 to 3 weeks are used in adults to confirm
reinfection by
M. pneumoniae, which is demonstrated by a significant
rise in titer in IgG antibodies. More recently, a sensitive
and specific PCR diagnostic method has proved its usefulness
for accurate and early diagnosis (
1,
4,
31,
32,
36), but its
use as the reference method is complicated by the fact that
a small number of healthy persons may carry the organism in
the respiratory tract and it may be shed only weeks or months
after resolution of an acute infection. Combined use of PCR
and IgM serology tests should thus allow the maximal number
of diagnoses at a very early phase of
M. pneumoniae pneumonia
in children (
38), a practice that we encourage physicians to
adopt in our laboratory.
The present data raise several important issues in the interpretation of M. pneumoniae EIAs.
The first important data were the results for sera from patients with other infections (group III), in which an excellent IgM specificity of the µ-capture EIA-Platelia (100%), a good specificity of EIA-BMD (90%), and a very bad IgM specificity of EIA-Biotest and EIA-Sorin (65 and 25%, respectively) were found. Because of this very low IgM specificity, the IgM EIA-Biotest and -Sorin should not be used as the single assay to diagnose Mycoplasma infection. The µ-capture EIA seems, thus, the most specific technique for M. pneumoniae IgM detection.
The second important data come from the 39 patients with positive M. pneumoniae PCR results (group I). There was a good agreement (85%) between the serological results obtained by the four EIAs and the direct PCR. The four IgM EIAs diagnosed a current M. pneumoniae infection in a large number of children (89 to 92%), with a sensitivity of 81 to 89% in the acute-phase serum specimens. In the present study, these young patients were hospitalized, which underlies the importance of IgM serology test to diagnose M. pneumoniae at a very early phase of infection. In adults, discrepant results were observed in the detection of IgM. Several sera had high levels of IgM by the indirect EIA and low levels of IgM when tested by µ-capture EIA, in agreement with a previous report (39). The stronger IgM reaction observed by EIA-Sorin and EIA-Biotest, in our study, is probably due to either nonspecific binding of macroglobulins or low levels of cross-reacting antibodies binding to nonprotein constituents of the EIA antigen preparation (3, 19, 26). Because it has been previously demonstrated that the main antigenic components reacting are proteins, better-defined specific protein antigen preparations should give more-accurate results and should be more specific than the use of a glycolipid or whole-cell antigen (8, 14, 27). However, other work proposed viability for a glycolipid antigen-based EIA with chloroform-methanol extraction (17). So, IgM specificity of EIA-BMD is better than EIA-Biotest and EIA-Sorin in which whole-cell lysates are used. Nevertheless, in processing the test, the potential interference of RF in indirect EIA has been eliminated by including an IgG absorbent. Concerning the IgG antibodies in group I (Table 2), they are best detected with EIA-BMD and EIA-Biotest (69 and 77%, respectively). EIA-Platelia and EIA-Sorin are less sensitive at identifying subjects infected with M. pneumoniae (64 and 59% sensitivity, respectively), which is confirmed by the results obtained with the acute-phase specimen of the 13 paired serum samples that show 15 and 31% sensitivity, respectively, versus 61% with both EIA-BMD and EIA-Biotest (Table 3).
Third, our study confirms that some control healthy subjects did have specific IgG (Table 5). The relatively high seroprevalence observed in EIA-BMD and EIA-Biotest is in agreement with the greatest IgG sensitivity found in infected patients. Because PCR was not performed, we cannot rule out an asymptomatic M. pneumoniae infection. However, since 1 of the 61 controls positive for IgG had IgM antibody detectable by EIA-Platelia and 4 of the 61 controls positive for IgG had IgM antibody detectable by EIA-BMD, it is more likely that the difference in sensitivity is to be explained by the different antigens used in coating plates. It is well-known that the serum immunoglobulins produced during an M. pneumoniae infection are very heterogeneous and that their kinetics is related to the type of antigen (14). Furthermore, given the high frequency with which M. pneumoniae infects the general population and the great sensitivity of IgG EIAs, it is not surprising to find a high endemic IgG seroprevalence; it has been shown previously that healthy persons often have elevated levels of specific M. pneumoniae IgG antibodies in their sera, probably because of past M. pneumoniae infections (2, 8, 14, 22). These data support the idea that the degree of accuracy of IgG detection is dependent on the definition of a particular cutoff value for discriminating between groups of infected patients and healthy subjects, and this cutoff should be high enough to avoid false-positive results but not too high for a good sensitivity. As for the BMD-EIA and Biotest-EIA, this interpretive dilemma may be dealt with by the designation of an equivocal or low-positive range. More surprising is the high IgM seroprevalence observed with EIA-Sorin and EIA-Biotest, supporting the argument that the specificity of IgM detection is essential.
Finally, discordant serological and PCR results were observed. A negative serological test with a positive PCR result was found for samples from six patients of group I. Probably because of its high sensitivity, it is possible that PCR is able to detect M. pneumoniae in circumstances other than acute infection; different studies have shown that M. pneumoniae can be detected in healthy persons. Persistence of mycoplasmas after a recent infection or possible carriage of M. pneumoniae in healthy people has been suggested by several authors to explain the absence of immune response (11, 12, 18, 20, 31, 32). This seems, however, very unlikely in the present cases because sera were obtained from patients with clinical features: one patient with pneumonia had clinical and radiographic improvement under macrolide treatment, two patients were immunocompromised (AIDS, renal transplant), a 71-year-old patient presented with pneumonia, and a neonate of 5 months had an asthmatic bronchitis. Our findings seem due rather to an impaired immune response (patients 1, 2, 3, and 4) and/or to a lack of antibody responses in samples taken too early in the disease (patients 1, 2, 5, and 6) (Table 4). Numerous M. pneumoniae PCR-positive samples have already been reported for patients less than 12 months old with negative serological responses, in immunocompromised patients, or in patients with serum samples taken too early in the disease (7, 31, 38). Thanks to strict guidelines for the general handling of the PCR procedure and high hybridization index of each respiratory sample, we can exclude the possibility of false-positive PCR results related to contamination by carryover of PCR products.
In conclusion, a positive specific IgM result allows the diagnosis of a recent M. pneumoniae infection with high reliability in children on a single serum sample, but only if a specific test is used. Because of their lack of specificity, the EIA-Sorin and EIA-Biotest are inaccurate for the routine detection of M. pneumoniae IgM. However, more washing in the EIA-Sorin procedure assay improves specificity (data not shown). Our results show that the µ-capture EIA-Platelia is the most specific technique for detecting M. pneumoniae-specific IgM and that the EIA-BMD has an acceptable specificity with a greater sensitivity in IgG detection. Both tests are suitable for routine diagnosis, and the choice depends on what processing and supplying facilities are available. In adults, when a single serum sample is used, and in the absence of IgM antibodies, the presence of specific IgG antibodies does not discriminate between a current and previous infection. A correct interpretation of EIAs requires paired sera with a rise in antibody titer between both tests, which consequently delays the results. Therefore, PCR should be combined with IgG and IgM antibody detection to allow fast and reliable diagnosis of M. pneumoniae infection. In the case of a negative PCR or negative IgM result with the acute-phase serum sample, IgG and IgM detection using paired sera is necessary to either confirm or reject the diagnosis of M. pneumoniae infection.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of Human and Molecular Virology, University Hospital, Avenue G. Clemenceau, 14033 Caen, France. Phone: 33 2 31 27 25 54. Fax: 33 2 31 27 25 57. E-mail:
petitjean-j{at}chu-caen.fr.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, January 2002, p. 165-171, Vol. 40, No. 1
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.1.165-171.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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