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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2005, p. 3278-3282, Vol. 43, No. 7
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.7.3278-3282.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Clinical Microscopy, Faculty of Associated Medical Sciences,1 Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen, Thailand,2 Department of Pathology, Police General Hospital, Patumwan, Bangkok, Thailand,3 Department of Medical Zoology, Mie School of Medicine, Mie University, Tsu 514-0002, Japan,4 Department of Community Health, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia5
Received 25 July 2004/ Returned for modification 7 December 2004/ Accepted 19 January 2005
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In our recent study (28), we demonstrated by APCT that the prevalence of strongyloidiasis in rural communities in northeast Thailand is high and surpasses that of Opisthorchis viverrini infection, which has predominated in this area for decades. In that study, application of ELISA as a supplementary method of serodiagnosis revealed as many as 46% of additional positive cases. Therefore, serodiagnosis has become an important method of choice for the diagnosis of strongyloidiasis in areas of endemicity.
The aim of the present work was to assess the performance and effectiveness of GPAT and ELISA for the diagnosis of human strongyloidiasis in northeast Thailand by using APCT as the reference method.
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Serum samples. Three groups of serum samples were analyzed in this study. Group I consisted of 459 serum samples from the populations in the communities in northeast Thailand described above. Group II consisted of serum samples from people with one other parasite infection but in whom S. stercoralis was not demonstrated by APCT. This group included 14 individuals infected with O. viverrini, 28 individuals infected with Clonorchis sinensis, 23 individuals infected with echinostomes, 16 individuals infected with minute intestinal flukes (Phaneropsolus and Prostodendrium spp.), 12 individuals infected with Taenia, 34 individuals with hookworms, 1 individual infected with Angiostrongylus cantonensis, and 10 individuals infected with Giardia intestinalis. These serum samples were used to identify the cross-reactivity of GPAT and ELISA between S. stercoralis and other parasites, and no subjects with multiple infections were recruited into this group. Group III consisted of 50 serum samples from noninfected, healthy controls from northeast Thailand used to establish the cutoff values for serological diagnosis by both GPAT and ELISA.
Fecal examination methods. The presence of S. stercoralis in the fecal samples was determined by the agar plate culture technique with approximately 4 g of feces, as described by Koga et al. (15). The other 2 g of fecal specimen was simultaneously processed for the modified formalin-ethyl acetate concentration technique (6) to search for concurrent parasite infections. Positive results by either method were taken as positive for strongyloidiasis and were taken as a "gold standard" diagnosis.
Antigen preparation. The method for antigen preparation of the crude somatic extract of the third-stage filariform larvae (L3) of S. stercoralis was performed as described previously (28). In brief, the larvae were originally obtained from cultures of feces from an infected patient by the filter paper culture technique of Harada and Mori (11). After 4 to 6 days of culture of S. stercoralis-positive feces at room temperature, the larvae were harvested and washed several times in normal saline. When the amount of larvae was adequate, usually 2 to 3 ml, the larval pellet was suspended in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing protease inhibitors and was disrupted by sonication (4). The homogenate was left at 4°C overnight and centrifuged at 17,266 x g for 30 min at 4°C. The supernatant was separated and used as the antigen, and the protein concentration was measured by the method of Lowry et al. (18) and kept at 20°C. The antigen was used for serodiagnosis by GPAT and ELISA.
ELISA. The indirect (optical density [OD]-based) ELISA was performed as described previously (28). The protocol was similar to those described by other investigators (4, 29). The microplates (Maxisorb; Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) were coated with 100 µl of 2 µg/ml of the antigen in carbonate buffer (pH 9.6) at 4°C overnight. After removal of unbound antigen by three 3-min washes with PBS containing 0.05% Tween (PBST), 200 µl of 5% skim milk in PBS was added to each well and the plate was kept at room temperature for 1 h. The wells were washed three times for 3 min each time with PBS, 100 µl of the serum samples (dilution, 1:1,500 in 2% skim milk in PBST, in duplicate) was added to the plate, and the plate was incubated for 1 h at 37°C. After the plate was washed three times, 100 µl of horseradish peroxidase anti-human immunoglobulin G (IgG; Zymed) in 2% skim milk in PBST (dilution, 1:5,000) was added to each well, and the plate was incubated at 37°C for 1 h. After the plate was washed, 100 µl of substrate solution (0.4 mg/ml of o-phenylenediamine, 0.001% H2O2 in citrate buffer, pH 5.0) was added to each well. After 15 min at 37°C, the reaction was stopped with 100 µl of 4 N H2SO4. The optical density of the reaction was measured at 490 nm with a microplate reader (Dynatech MR 5000). The ELISA result was judged to be positive when the OD was greater than the cutoff OD of 0.26. The cutoff OD was calculated from the mean OD for 50 negative control cases plus 3 standard deviations.
Gelatin particle agglutination assay. GPAT was performed as described by Sato et al. (25). The unsensitized gelatin particles (Fujirebio Inc., Japan) were suspended in PBS (pH 6.4), washed four times in PBS, and adjusted to a concentration of 3%. Equal volumes of 0.01 mg/ml of tannic acid in PBS were added to the gelatin suspension and kept in ice for 15 min and mixed every 5 min. Then, the gelatins were washed three times with cold PBS and readjusted to the original concentration (3%). Based on the preliminary experiment, an equal volume of 60 µg/ml S. stercoralis antigen was then mixed with the gelatin suspension and the antigen absorption reaction was allowed to take place for 15 min in a 37°C water bath with continuous mixing. Any excess antigen was removed by washing four times with 0.2% bovine serum albumin (BSA) in PBS, and the final concentration of the gelatin suspension was adjusted to 1% and kept at 4°C until required for testing. The unsensitized gelatin particles for the control experiments were also prepared in the same manner, except that normal saline was used instead of the antigen. GPAT was performed in a U-bottom plate with a twofold dilution of 25 µl of the serum samples with 0.2% BSA in PBS and 25 µl of the 1% gelatin particle suspension. After gentle mixing of the contents of the plate, the plate was left at room temperature for 2 h prior to interpretation of the test result. The agglutination pattern was considered positive when the smooth mat of particles spread uniformly and covered the entire bottom of the well, and the edge of the mat was sometimes folded. If the gelatin particles were concentrated at the center of the well, it was interpreted as a negative reaction. If any equivocal pattern appeared, the samples were retested and the results were read by two individuals for final interpretation of the results. The highest antibody dilution that gave a positive agglutination reaction was taken as the antibody titer. The cutoff value for a positive titer for GPAT was 32, and this was obtained from the tests done with 50 negative control serum samples. For quality control, in each run of the GPAT, the titer of the positive control used for the entire experiment should be 1:1,024 ±1 doubling dilution. In addition, wells with unsensitized particles in the presence of the test serum and the sensitized particle in the presence of PBS should give negative reactions.
This study was reviewed and approved by the Ethics Committee on Human Research, Faculty of Medicine, Khon Kaen University.
Statistical analyses. The OD and antibody titers were not normally distributed, and thus, the data were log transformed. Kendall's tau correlation coefficient was used to assess the relationship between the OD values and the antibody titers. Statistical tests were performed with the SPSS v.10 statistical package.
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TABLE 1. Comparison of rates of positivity for S. stercoralis among populations sampled in northeast Thailand as determined by APCT, ELISA, GPAT
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TABLE 2. Sensitivities and specificities of ELISA and GPAT for diagnosis of S. stercoralis infection in the population sampled in northeast Thailanda
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FIG. 1. Relationship between antibody titer by GPAT and ELISA value (OD490) for samples from 459 individuals in five localities in northeast Thailand. The data shown are the observed values, and the solid line is the linear regression line with a slope of 0.241 and a y-axis intercept of 0.45 (t = 25.7; P < 0.001; R = 0.77).
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TABLE 3. Comparison of cross-reactions of S. stercoralis antigen with sera from patients with other parasitic infections determined by GPAT and ELISAa
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TABLE 4. Rates of parasitic infections among subjects who were negative for strongyloidiasis by APCTa
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The high variability in the prevalence of S. stercoralis encountered among different communities in this study was not unexpected, because a recent study in northeast Thailand (n = 1,233) also found a similar pattern of infection (13), with the prevalences in different provinces ranging from 13.3 to 61%. From that study (13), the prevalence of S. stercoralis infection in Khon Kaen was 16.5%, whereas it ranged from 12.7 to 53.8% in four communities (BM, KT, NP, and NEK) in the same province. Likewise, the prevalence in Kalasin Province was 61%, whereas it was 28.1% in HMT, which is a community in Kalasin Province. Therefore, the background prevalence of S. stercoralis in each province may not be the sole factor contributing to the differences in prevalence observed in the communities evaluated in this study.
The observed cross-reaction of GPAT with the sera from patients infected with O. viverrini and hookworms was not entirely unexpected, since several species of parasites coexist in the area and it is uncommon to find individuals infected with a single species of parasite. The observed cross-reactivity was therefore probably associated with multiple infections or previous exposure to the helminths and was partially due to the nature of the crude somatic extract of the antigen of S. stercoralis used in GPAT and ELISA. A similar cross-reactivity of GPAT to hookworms and the agents responsible for angiostrongyliasis, sparganosis, and cysticercosis was reported previously (25). The sera of individuals with occult filariasis and schistosomiasis also showed consistent cross-reactions by the indirect hemagglutination test (8). The use of the partially purified third-stage larval antigen for ELISA has slightly improved the efficiency of the ELISA over that obtained with crude or unpurified antigen fractions (19). Recently, in the immediate hypersensitivity skin test for strongyloidiasis with crude and excretory-secretory antigen, cross-reaction with filaria-positive sera was also encountered (22). These cross-reactions may be minimized by using a more complicated Western blot analysis, whose sensitivity and specificity are greatly increased (5, 17). It appears, therefore, that the identification of a specific antigen(s) is the precondition for elimination of these cross-reactions with other helminths (27).
Additionally, in the case of infection with multiple parasites, preincubation of the sera with certain parasite antigens to reduce the cross-reacting antibodies improved the specificity of the serological test by ELISA (4). Those authors found that for patients with hookworm infections, when the sera were preincubated with an extract of Ascaris lumbricoides, the cross-reacting IgG could be effectively reduced. It remains to be determined whether this approach will similarly improve the specificity of GPAT.
In our study, a single fecal sample from each subject was collected for examination, and thus, GPAT gave the correct test results not only for all of the fecal sample-positive individuals but also for the fecal-negative individuals. Although triple stool examinations are recommended (23), it would be interesting to investigate how many more fecal sample-positive cases could be retrieved by repeated fecal sampling for analysis by APCT (among the fecal sample-negative individuals). Although concurrent parasitic infections were commonly observed in this study, two major cross-reactive parasites, O. viverini and hookworm, occurred in similar percentages of GAPT-positive and -negative individuals. It is unlikely that they may cause false-positive test results. However, the influence of higher rates of infection with other parasites for the GPAT-positive group than the GPAT-negative group upon the false-positive test result is difficult to rule out. More study is needed to resolve this issue. By contrast, in the case of ELISA, the rates of false-negative test results for patients with proven strongyloidiasis ranged from 16 to 20% (2, 3, 24). Such findings indicate that the wide spectrum of host immune responses against S. stercoralis infection influences the outcome of the serodiagnostic assays. This difference in the individual response to infection may affect not only serodiagnosis but also the effectiveness of drug treatment. For example, elevated S. stercoralis-specific IgG4 has been found to be associated with albendazole resistance (26) or ivermectin resistance (16).
The finding that the antibody titer by GPAT positively correlated with the OD values obtained by ELISA suggested that GPAT provided not only a qualitative measurement but also a semiquantitative measurement. Whether the rate of change in these values after chemotherapy will be proportional and which measurement is a better marker of curative treatment is not known. ELISA was employed to evaluate the outcome of treatment (14), but no investigation with GPAT has been done.
In conclusion, the results of our study demonstrated that GPAT is more sensitive than ELISA for the serodiagnosis of strongyloidiasis. The results also demonstrated that GPAT is superior to ELISA. In particular, GPAT is easy to perform and there is no need for specialized equipment. In addition, the gelatin particles have many advantages as an antigen carrier, e.g., in handling and reading of the resulting pattern. The test was considered to be more convenient than the conventional ELISA for mass screening for strongyloidiasis in an area of endemicity and may be applied as a routine laboratory test to rule out strongyloidiasis in immunosuppressed patients and patients with malignancies.
We thank Fujirebio Inc., Japan, for providing the gelatin particles for this study. We also thank Trevor Petney and Bryan Roderick Hamman for assisting with the English-language presentation of the manuscript. The kind donation of sera from patients with clonorchiasis by Sung-Tae Hong is greatly appreciated.
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