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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2002, p. 584-587, Vol. 40, No. 2
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.2.584-587.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Comparison of Three Commercially Available Peptide-Based Immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgA Assays to Microimmunofluorescence Assay for Detection of Chlamydia trachomatis Antibodies
Servaas A. Morré,1 Christian Munk,2 Kenneth Persson,3 Susanne Krüger-Kjaer,2 Rogier van Dijk,1 Chris J. L. M. Meijer,1 and Adriaan J. C. van den Brule1*
Department of Pathology, Section of Molecular Pathology, Vrije Universiteit Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands,1
Danish Cancer Society, Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, Copenhagen, Denmark,2
Department of Clinical Microbiology, Malmö University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden3
Received 29 May 2001/
Returned for modification 23 July 2001/
Accepted 18 November 2001

ABSTRACT
Three commercially available, peptide-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay (ELISA) systems (Chlamydia trachomatis IgG and IgA EIA
[CT-EIA; Labsystems OY, Helsinki, Finland], SeroCT IgG and IgA
[SeroCT; Savyon Diagnostics Ltd., Ashdod, Israel], and Chlamydia
trachomatis IgG and IgA pELISA [CT pELISA; Medac, Wedel, Germany])
were evaluated for the detection of serum immunoglobulin G (IgG)
and IgA antibodies specific for
Chlamydia trachomatis and compared
to the "gold standard" assay, the microimmunofluorescence (MIF)
assay. Serological responses were analyzed in 149 women aged
20 to 30 years. Cervical swabs obtained from these women were
examined for
C. trachomatis by PCR, and 43 were found to be
positive. The overall seroprevalence rates detected by CT-EIA,
SeroCT, CT pELISA, and the MIF assay were 42, 42, 35, and 39%,
respectively, for IgG and 7, 7, 3, and 7%, respectively, for
IgA. The IgG seroprevalence rates for the PCR-positive women
were two to three times higher than those for the PCR-negative
women, i.e., 72 versus 29%, 72 versus 29%, 47 versus 26%, and
74 versus 25% for CT-EIA, SeroCT, CT pELISA, and the MIF assay,
respectively. After discrepancy analysis, the sensitivity, specificity,
positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were
calculated for the IgG assays; for CT-EIA they were 84.7, 98.6,
98.4, and 86.7%, respectively; for CT pELISA they were 71.4,
97.3, 96.2, and 78.3%, respectively; for SeroCT they were 84.7,
98.6, 98.4, and 86.3%, respectively; and for the MIF assay they
were 79.2, 83.1, 98.3, and 83.1%, respectively. In conclusion,
these peptide-based ELISA systems for the serological detection
of
C. trachomatis infection performed as well as the MIF assay.
Since these tests are less time-consuming, less expensive, and
easier to perform than the MIF assay, they might be useful in
the serodiagnosis of chlamydial infection.

INTRODUCTION
Chlamydia trachomatis infection is the most prevalent sexually
transmitted disease in Europe and the United States. In women,
this infection can lead to severe sequelae like ectopic pregnancy
and tubal infertility.
C. trachomatis serology has been used
for both diagnostic purposes and large epidemiological studies.
However, widespread introduction of
C. trachomatis-specific
serology has not gained wide acceptance. The microimmunofluorescence
(MIF) assay (
10) is still regarded as the "gold standard" in
the serological diagnosis of
C. trachomatis infections. However,
the MIF assay is not suited for use by routine laboratories
since reading of the specific fluorescence requires a high degree
of expertise. Also, current serological tests employ either
group-specific lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or reticulate bodies
as antigen and thus show cross-reactivity with
C. pneumoniae (
4). Serological cross-reactivity leads to high rates of false-positive
results, especially in a population with a low prevalence of
C. trachomatis infection, since the rates of
C. pneumoniae seroprevalence
are up to 60%. In addition, there have been reports on serological
cross-reactivity due to proteins from other bacteria, e.g.,
Acinetobacter (
2).
Several user-friendly enzyme immunoassays with increased specificity have been developed by using LPS-stripped C. trachomatis particles (8). Recently, three commercially available assays have been developed by using specific synthetic peptides based on the major outer membrane of C. trachomatis. These assays have the potential to be both specific and sensitive. Proper comparison of these serological assays to the MIF assay is strongly needed since these new tests are well standardized, less expensive, and less laborious than MIF.
Therefore, we analyzed these new commercially available, peptide-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) systems for the detection of specific serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgA antibodies to C. trachomatis in relation to the detection of C. trachomatis infections in the corresponding cervical scrapings by PCR. The performances of these new assays were compared to that of the MIF assay.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Patient population.
Sera from 149 women were analyzed for IgG and IgA antibodies
against
C. trachomatis. These 149 women, who were part of a
population-based cohort (
6), were screened for asymptomatic
C. trachomatis infections by PCR (performed as described previously
[
5,
7]). Cervical scrapings were PCR positive for
C. trachomatis for 43 women and PCR negative for
C. trachomatis for 106 women.
Serological assays.
The following three peptide-based serological assays were compared: Chlamydia trachomatis IgG and IgA EIA (CT-EIA; new version; Labsystems OY, Helsinki, Finland), SeroCT IgG and IgA (SeroCT; Savyon Diagnostics Ltd., Ashdod, Israel), and the Chlamydia trachomatis IgG and IgA pELISA (CT pELISA; Medac, Wedel, Germany). All three tests were performed according to the manufacturers' instructions. An in-house MIF assay was performed as described previously (9). Slides with antigens of C. trachomatis, C. psittaci, and C. pneumoniae (Labsystems OY) were used for this assay. A titer of
16 was considered diagnostically significant. In addition, the in-house MIF assay and a second MIF assay (the MRL-MIF assay; MRL Diagnostics, Santa Barbara, Calif.) were used for discrepancy analysis. This test was performed with all samples for which there was no concordance with the peptide-based assays.
Statistical analysis.
For comparison of the three peptide-based tests to the MIF assay, the sensitivities, specificities, positive predictive values (PPVs), and negative predictive values (NPVs) were calculated by using two-by-two tables. Values in the grey zone (optical densities between the values for negativity and positivity), as defined by the manufacturer, were excluded from these calculations.
Discrepancy analysis was performed by the in-house MIF assay a second time and by the MRL-MIF assay. MIF assay results were considered true-positive results if the second MIF assay or the MRL-MIF assay could confirm the initially positive MIF assay result. After discrepancy analysis, true-positive results were defined as either positivity or negativity by the MIF assay but positivity by at least two of the three peptide-based assays.
To investigate if the C. trachomatis serological titers determined by the MIF assay were higher for the women who were PCR positive for C. trachomatis than for the women who were PCR negative for C. trachomatis, a t test for independent samples was performed.

RESULTS
Seroprevalence rates and concordance.
The MIF assay with slides with antigens of
C. trachomatis,
C. psittaci, and
C. pneumoniae (Labsystems OY) showed no cross-reactivity
with
C. pneumoniae (data not shown). The IgG and IgA seroprevalence
rates for the three peptide-based assays and the MIF assay are
shown in Table
1. For all four assays the overall IgG seroprevalence
rate was about 40% and the overall IgA seroprevalence rate was
about 7%. The IgG seroprevalence rates for the women who were
PCR positive for
C. trachomatis were two to three times higher
than those for the PCR-negative women. The IgG seroprevalence
rate for the CT pELISA for the PCR-positive women (56% [24 of
43 women]) was lower than that for the other assays (about 72%
[31 of 43 women]). The overall IgA seroprevalence rate for the
CT pELISA (3%) was also lower than that for the other assays
(7%). Women positive for IgA were almost all positive for IgG
too: for CT-EIA, 90% (9 of 10); for CT pELISA, 80% (4 of 5);
for SeroCT, 100% (10 of 10); and for the MIF assay, 91% (10
of 11). The concordances of the IgG results for all of the different
assays are shown in Table
2. Most samples (
n = 36) were positive
by all four tests, whereas 13 were positive by all three peptide-based
assays, and 10 samples were positive only by the MIF assay.
Test performances.
The sensitivities, specificities, PPVs, and NPVs of the three
peptide-based assays and the MIF assay, as calculated after
discrepancy analysis, are shown in Table
3. Results are calculated
only for the IgG assays since the seroprevalence of IgA was
too low to make accurate calculations. Although the results
for the four assays were comparable, all four variables analyzed
were slightly lower for the CT pELISA.
C. pneumoniae titers
were not responsible for the discrepancies between the results
of the tests.
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TABLE 3. Sensitivities, specificities, PPVs, and NPVs of the three IgG peptide-based assays and MIF assay after discrepancy analysis
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MIF assay titers.
The serum
C. trachomatis IgG titers in the sera of the PCR-positive
and -negative women determined by the MIF assay were compared
to investigate whether the
C. trachomatis titers were associated
with PCR positivity. Although the mean titers in the sera of
the PCR-positive women were found to be slightly higher than
those in the sera of the PCR-negative women, the difference
was not statistically significant by the
t test for independent
samples (
P = 0.135).

DISCUSSION
This is the first study to compare three recently introduced
commercially available peptide-based serology assays to the
MIF assay for the detection of antibodies to
C. trachomatis.
In general, these peptide-based assays performed as well as
the MIF assay. Since these tests are easier to perform than
the MIF assay, they might be good alternatives to the MIF assay
for the detection of
C. trachomatis antibodies.
In general, the seroprevalence rates and performances of the recently introduced peptide-based assays for the assay of IgG were comparable to those of the MIF assay. Slightly lower C. trachomatis prevalence rates and sensitivities were found by the CT pELISA than by the two other peptide-based assays. The samples were retested blindly (Medac), and IgG prevalence rates (40%) and IgG sensitivities (77%) comparable to those obtained by the two other peptide-based assays obtained in the first analysis were found. Although possible differences between batch numbers, buffers, and controls were analyzed, the reason for the difference in the results that were obtained could not be identified. The IgA prevalence rate was too low (7%) to calculate test performances due to the small number of IgA-positive patients. As for the IgG seroprevalence rate, the IgA seroprevalence rate obtained by the CT pELISA was slightly lower than the rates obtained by the other assays. Retesting of the samples for IgA (Medac) resulted in an IgA seroprevalence (9%) comparable to that determined by the CT pELISA.
Thus far, few studies have compared these new serological assays with the MIF assay. Antilla et al. (1) showed that the CT-EIA was more sensitive than the MIF assay in a study that analyzed the influence of C. trachomatis on the risk for the development of cervical cancer. Gijsen et al. (A. P. Gijsen, V. J. Goossens, J. A. Land, J. L. H. Evers, and C. A. Bruggeman, Proc. Fourth Meet. Eur. Meet. Eur. Soc. Chlamydia Res., p. 101, 2000) compared the MIF assay to the SeroCT assay and found no significant differences in the sensitivities and specificities between the two assays for patients with tubal factor infertility. Maass et al. (M. Maass, D. Franke, S. Birkelund, G. Christiansen, K. Persson, and M. Böttcher, Proc. Fourth Meet. Eur. Meet. Eur. Soc. Chlamydia Res., p. 112, 2000) compared the MIF assay to the CT pELISA and showed that the assays had good reproducibilities and good overall precisions and concluded that, due to the synthetic antigen, the assay showed excellent specificity. Finally, Persson and Boman (9) compared the MIF assay to the CT pELISA for patients with tubal factor infertility and controls and showed that the results of the CT pELISA correlated well with the antibody results for C. trachomatis obtained by the MIF assay but did not correlate at all with the antibody results for C. pneumoniae obtained by the MIF assay.
In the present study, the women were also tested by PCR for the presence of C. trachomatis in the corresponding cervical scrapings. The seroprevalence rates for the IgG assays were more than twice as high for women with PCR-positive cervical scrapings than for women with PCR-negative cervical scrapings. The seroprevalence rates for women confirmed to be positive for C. trachomatis by PCR in our study (IgG seroprevalence rate range, 72 to 74%; IgA seroprevalence rate range, 7 to 12%) were comparable to those in the literature for women confirmed to be positive for C. trachomatis (by culture and direct immunofluorescence [Micro Trak]): IgG seroprevalence rate by the MIF assay, 85%; IgA seroprevalence rate by the MIF assay, 4 to 24% (3). However, not all PCR-positive samples were IgG positive, suggesting a first infection with C. trachomatis, an infection with C. trachomatis at another site (e.g., an urethral or ocular infection), or a very low IgG response (below the detection level).
The three commercially available assays performed equally well when large numbers of samples were tested and offer the possibility for automation, which is important for large epidemiological studies. Furthermore, in contrast to the MIF assay, objective reading of the results is possible. The prevalence of positive serological results for patients with C. trachomatis-positive cervical scrapings (as determined by PCR) is significantly higher (72%) than that for women negative by PCR (28%), and the results obtained by these new assays were comparable to those of the MIF assay, supporting the validities of these new assays. Data were obtained in the present study by using sera from asymptomatically infected women; future studies should address both symptomatically infected women and women with late complications to further compare the performances of these new peptide-based assays to the performance of the MIF assay. The peptide-based serological assays might be valuable for epidemiological studies for the analysis of past and current C. trachomatis infections.
In conclusion, the three new peptide-based assays performed equally as well as or even slightly better than the MIF assay for the detection of antibodies to C. trachomatis. Since these tests are well standardized, less expensive, and less laborious than the MIF assay, they might be good alternatives to the MIF assay for the detection of C. trachomatis antibodies.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was partly supported by ZON (Prevention Fund) grant
98-1-571, Den Haag, The Netherlands.
We thank Labsystems (CT-EIA), Savyon (SeroCT), and Medac (CT pELISA) for providing the C. trachomatis IgG and IgA serology kits and reagents for performance of the comparison.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Pathology, Section of Molecular Pathology, University Hospital Vrije Universiteit, De Boelelaan 1117, 1081 HV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Phone: 31-20-4440503. Fax: 31-20-4442964. E-mail:
vandenbrule{at}vumc.nl.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2002, p. 584-587, Vol. 40, No. 2
0095-1137/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.2.584-587.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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