EVALUATION OF ENZYME-LINKED IMMUNOASSAY FOR SEROLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS OF CYSTICERCOSIS

Citation
L. Sloan et al., EVALUATION OF ENZYME-LINKED IMMUNOASSAY FOR SEROLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS OF CYSTICERCOSIS, Journal of clinical microbiology, 33(12), 1995, pp. 3124-3128
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Microbiology
ISSN journal
00951137
Volume
33
Issue
12
Year of publication
1995
Pages
3124 - 3128
Database
ISI
SICI code
0095-1137(1995)33:12<3124:EOEIFS>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
We evaluated a commercially available enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA ) from LMD Laboratories, Inc., Carlsbad, Calif,, for the detection of antibodies in serum to the cysticercus of Taenia solium. The ELISA aas performed on 308 serum samples; 198 from a pool of healthy individual s, 42 from patients who had antibodies against a variety of parasites other than T. solium, and 68 from patients suspected of having cystice rcosis. All of these 68 specimens were tested both by the ELISA and by an immunoblot method (enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot assay [EITB]) developed at the Parasitic Serology Laboratory of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Twenty-seven of the 68 serum sampl es from patients suspected of having cysticercosis were positive by bo th EITB and ELISA, while 31 were negative by both assays. ELISA result s for three and two samples were considered false positive and false n egative, respectively, when compared with the results of EITB. Results for an additional five samples were considered equivocal but were tec hnically positive because their optical density readings were slightly above the cutoff value. Three of the 198 serum samples from the bank of serum samples from healthy individuals were also false positive by ELISA (the EITB result for the samples was negative). Six other serum samples from healthy individuals which had equivocal results and the f ive serum samples from patients,vith equivocal results were EITB negat ive. Serum samples containing antibodies against Echinococcus spp, fre quently cross-reacted with the cysticercus ELISA antigen (13 of 16 spe cimens), but serum samples with antibodies against other parasites did not (2 of 26 specimens); all of these serum samples were EITB negativ e. The commercially available ELISA that we describe is a simple and r apid test. Considering all 308 specimens, the ELISA had a specificity of 93% (when samples with equivocal results were considered negative) or 89% (when samples with equivocal results were considered positive); the sensitivity was 93%.