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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, June 2005, p. 2793-2797, Vol. 43, No. 6
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.6.2793-2797.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Centre National de Référence des Arbovirus,1 Epidemiology Unit, Institut Pasteur de la Guyane, Cayenne, French Guiana2
Received 9 August 2004/ Returned for modification 12 October 2004/ Accepted 1 February 2005
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Infection confers lasting immunity to the serotype involved. Until recently, the most commonly used serological techniques for the routine diagnosis of dengue virus were the hemagglutination inhibition (HI) test (6) and capture immunoglobulin M (IgM) by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) (3). The HI test is the reference test recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) to discriminate between primary and secondary dengue virus infection (27). Secondary infections are characterized by the presence of HI antibodies in acute-phase samples and by high titers of HI antibodies (>1:1,280) in serum from convalescence phase serum samples.
The pathogenesis of DHF is still unclear (10, 11), although since the 1970s secondary infection with a different serotype has been suspected to be a risk factor for DHF (12, 13). If this antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) hypothesis is verified, it could be useful for the treating clinician to determine the immunological status of each hospitalized patient with dengue infection.
Many investigators have questioned the general applicability of using HI titers to distinguish primary from secondary infections in regions where two or more flaviviruses are cocirculating because IgG antibodies measured are broadly flavivirus reactive. This reference test also requires paired serum samples and cannot give an early diagnosis. Innis et al. developed an ELISA for the diagnosis of dengue infection (17). This technique, based on the IgM/IgG ratio, can distinguish between primary and secondary infections. However, IgM can persist for more than 8 months and can be produced in a nonspecific manner (4, 5). This can make it difficult to determine the immunological status of the patient. These observations suggest that an alternative method is required to discriminate primary from secondary dengue virus infections.
The method of choice seems to be the measurement of the antigen-binding avidity of specific IgG: a first study showed the usefulness of IgG avidity to discriminate between primary and secondary dengue infection (8). The avidity assay is based on the fact that the first antibodies synthesized after an antigenic challenge or primary infection have a lower affinity for the antigen than those produced later on. It has been shown to be useful for distinguishing primary from chronic or recurrent infections of other viruses, such as rubella virus (14), hantavirus (15), or human herpesviruses (9, 26). Therefore, we designed an avidity test requiring a single serum sample collected during the acute phase of infection to determine the immunological status of dengue patients.
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WHO laboratory criteria were used to classify the sera as primary or secondary dengue infection according to the results of the HI tests (27). These tests were previously performed for each serum samples analyzed with our IgG avidity test described below. Three groups of serum samples were defined. (i) Group A consisted of 30 pairs of sera from patients infected with the Den-3 serotype: 16 primary infections and 14 secondary infections. This group was used to show that the avidity index was statistically different between the primary and secondary dengue infection serum samples. (ii) Group B consisted of group A plus 43 additional pairs of sera and 21 sequential serum samples from seven dengue patients. Among all of the patients unique to group B, 34 had a primary infection and 16 had a secondary infection. Using a discriminant analysis, this group was used to build a classification function from the avidity index and the day of fever to distinguish between primary and secondary dengue infection. (iii) Group C consisted of 25 pairs of sera and 55 sequential serum samples from 13 patients infected with dengue virus. Among all of these patients, 23 had a primary infection and 15 had a secondary infection. This group was used to assess the sensitivity and the specificity of the test. Patients from groups B and C were infected by serotype DEN-1, DEN-2, or DEN-3.
Antigens. The dengue antigens (DEN-2 and DEN-3) used for the present study were prepared by the sucrose acetone method (6) and were obtained from the reference collection of the Centre National de Reference des Arbovirus. Normal mouse brain antigen was used as a control in all tests.
Development of the IgG avidity test. The best dilutions of the different reagents for the IgG ELISA were determined in preliminary tests with positive and negative reference sera. We used as a negative control sera from patients vaccinated against yellow fever without any history of dengue infection. Some of the wells of two flat-bottom microplates (Polysorp; Nunc) were coated with 100 µl of dengue antigen diluted 1:2,000 in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Normal mouse brain antigen was diluted in an identical manner and used to coat other adjacent wells. After overnight incubation at 4°C, the microplates were washed three times with PBS containing 0.1% Tween 20 (PBS-T; both reagents from Sigma Laboratories, l'Isle d'Abeau Chesnes, France). The sera were diluted (1:100) in PBS containing 0.1% Tween 20 and 5% nonfat dried milk (PBS-T-NDM) and added to each well of two separate microplates (100 µl/well). Six negative and two positive reference sera were included in each plate as controls. The negative controls consisted of sera from patients with other febrile illnesses but negative for dengue infection. The plates were then incubated for 2 h at 37°C. One of the plates was washed three times with PBS-T, whereas 300 µl of PBS-T containing 8 M urea (Sigma Laboratories) was added to each well of the second plate, followed by incubation at 37°C for 5 min, and then washed three times with PBS-T. Each serum was tested at least in duplicate or in six wells on each plate. Bound IgG was detected by the addition of 100 µl per well of conjugated goat anti-human IgG horseradish peroxidase (Jackson Immunoresearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA) diluted 1:2,000 in PBS-T-NDM. After 1 h at 37°C, the plates were washed with PBS-T. Bound antibodies were visualized by adding tetramethylbenzidine (Sigma Laboratories) at 100 µl per well.
After 15 min at room temperature, the absorbance at 650 nm (A650) was read with a microplate reader, and the
A650 was calculated (
A650 = A650 Den Ag A650 control Ag). To validate the test, the
A650 of the positive control serum had to be
0.5 and the
A650 of the negative control serum had to be
0.2. The mean ± the standard deviation A650 values for the negative controls were then determined. A result was considered negative when the A650 values were less than the mean value for the negative control plus two standard deviations, indeterminate when the A650 values were between two and three standard deviations, and positive when the A650 values were more than three standard deviations. An avidity index or percentage of avidity was then calculated for each sample in which dengue IgG were detected: (A650 assay with urea/A650 assay without urea) x 100.
Statistical analysis. We used BMDP statistical software for the statistical analysis (BMDP statistical software 1992). We used the W statistic of the Wilk's test for normality to test the normal distribution of the avidity level and the Student t test to compare the mean avidity levels according to immune status.
First, we checked that the avidity level was significantly different between primary and secondary dengue infection. For this, we used a covariance analysis. This method takes into account the repeated measures for each serum, the inter-individual variations, and the temporal trends in avidity levels during the disease. It can also compare trends over time between primary and secondary dengue infection. Using covariance analysis we assessed the adjustment of the model, testing the level of significance of the model (P value) with or without the variables included in the model (20, 22). When P value is <0.05 for a given variable, we concluded that this variable has a significant role in the level of avidity of the sera. If the immune status, i.e., primary or secondary dengue infection, has a significant level, then it was possible to conclude that avidity levels are significantly different between primary and secondary dengue infection cases.
Second, we used a discriminant analysis to classify the category of serum samples according to WHO laboratory criteria for identification of dengue infections as primary or secondary. This discriminant analysis, based on the level of avidity and the day of fever when the sample had been collected, finds the combination of the variables that best predicts the category (primary or secondary) to which a serum sample belongs. The combination of predictor variables is called a classification function. It is possible to assess the performances of the classification function (sensitivity and specificity) by using the Jack Knife method. However, these results are calculated based on the sample that has been also used for building the classification function. Thus, in the third step, in order to assess the real performance of the method, we classified cases that were not used in the calculations in the second step.
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Among the 1,140 avidity measurements taken in the present study, avidity ranged from 0 to 108, with a mean value of 40.1, a standard deviation of 35.8, and a median value of 42. The avidity level, followed a normal distribution (W statistic = 0.98, P > 0.05). The mean avidity was significantly lower among the 738 primary dengue infection sera (25.9%) than among the 402 secondary dengue infection sera (66.3%) (Student t test, P < 0.001) (Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Comparison of the mean IgG avidity values for primary and secondary dengue infectionsa
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FIG. 1. Temporal changes in IgG antibody avidity in sera from patients (group A) with primary ( ) and secondary ( ) dengue infections according to WHO criteria. Trends for a primary (- -) and a secondary infection () are indicated.
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The level of avidity of each serum sample was significantly related to the day of blood collection (P < 0.001), to the immune status (P = 0.03), and to the interaction between day of blood collection and immune status (P < 0.001). Whatever the immune status was, the level of avidity increased with the day of blood collection, but the avidity level of the primary sera was always lower than that of the secondary sera. The equations of the linear regressions for the primary and secondary dengue infection cases were, respectively, avidity index = 2.5 x day of blood collection 1.38 and avidity index = 1.3 x day of blood collection + 12.
Classification function. After checking that the immune status was significantly related to the level of avidity, we carried out discriminant analysis with 764 measures of avidity: 500 measures were obtained from primary dengue infection sera and the others from secondary dengue infection sera (group B). The variables used in the discriminant analysis were the day of blood collection (from day 1 of disease to day 142), the level of avidity of the sera, and the interaction between day of collection and level of avidity. For each serum, the classification function was equal to: (0.11 x day) (0.046 x avidity) (0.00088 x day x avidity) + 1.6. When the result was positive the serum was classified as a primary dengue infection, and when negative the serum was classified as a secondary dengue infection. The sensitivity and the specificity values calculated by the Jack Knife method were, respectively, 75.0% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 71.9 to 78.1) and 76.5% (95% CI = 73.5 to 79.5). In other words, the classification function allowed us to classify 375 of 500 (75%) primary sera as primary dengue infections and 202 of 264 (76.5%) secondary sera as secondary dengue infections on the basis of their avidity indexes (Table 2).
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TABLE 2. Performance of IgG avidity test with sera from patients with primary or secondary dengue infections as determined by using the HI test as a reference testa
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The HI test is still recommended by the WHO as a help for distinguishing primary from secondary infection (27). The technical difficulties of this test mean that it cannot be used routinely, especially during epidemics. Furthermore, it has a couple of disadvantages: the need to take two samples at an appropriate time interval and a strong cross-reaction with other flavivirus-specific IgG antibodies (1). In the absence of a second sample, it is not possible to determine the immunological status of patients or to know whether some primary infections are misclassified as secondary infections because they present very high levels of antibodies even in the first days of infection (2, 24).
Other techniques have been proposed, including an ELISA based on the IgM/IgG ratio that allows rapid differential diagnosis (17, 25). However, the persistence of IgM for more than 8 months after infection can result in interpretation errors.
The level of avidity of serum samples, based on the strength of the affinity of antibodies for the pathogen, appears to be an excellent alternative. The studies carried out by De Souza et al. have shown for the first time that, by using a commercial kit for serological dengue diagnosis, it was possible to discriminate between a case of primary dengue infection and a case of secondary dengue infection by detecting avid IgG (8). Our results, obtained with a serological test developed in our laboratory, confirm those obtained by De Souza. Indeed, during the infectious episode, we observed a mean avidity of 25.9% during a primary infection and 66.3% during a secondary infection. The sensitivity and specificity of the test were 82.7 and 77.5%, respectively, with a single sample. If we focused on serum samples collected between days 3 and 7 of infection, during which most clinical complications of the disease occur, the sensitivity and specificity of the test increased to 95.1 and 80.0%, respectively. Moreover, it is likely that the performances of this test are underestimated. Indeed, since we had no alternative to the HI test, it is highly probable that some of the 138 measures of avidity obtained with sera defined as "secondary infection" used to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of the method were in fact primary infections.
The avidity test, which is easier to carry out than the HI test, may become a useful reference technique for clinicians and epidemiologists because it can discriminate between primary and secondary infections with just one acute-phase serum sample. To definitively evaluate the performances of this test, it is necessary to obtain samples from patients for whom the diagnosis of primary or secondary infection is not based solely on the HI test. For example, for patients with second dengue infection, complementary informations, such as whether the patient previously tested positive for the virus, would be more informative. This method will eliminate the incertitude linked to the HI test interpretation criteria.
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