D. Lieberman et al., MICROPARTICLE AGGLUTINATION VERSUS ANTIBODY-CAPTURE ENZYME-IMMUNOASSAY FOR DIAGNOSIS OF COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED MYCOPLASMA-PNEUMONIAE PNEUMONIA, European journal of clinical microbiology & infectious diseases, 14(7), 1995, pp. 577-584
Community-acquired Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia is a common disease
which is usually diagnosed by serological methods. The objective of t
he present study was to understand the diagnostic significance and tes
t characteristics of two different serological tests used to identify
current Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection. Three hundred sixty-six patie
nts who suffered from community-acquired pneumonia served as the study
population. Six hundred ninety-four (328 paired and 38 unpaired) sera
were examined for the presence of antibodies to Mycoplasma pneumoniae
with commercial kits based on two serological methods, microparticle
agglutination and antibody-capture EIA. Agreement between the two kits
was 85.2% when individual sera were compared (Kappa = 0.62) and 88.5%
when patients were compared (Kappa = 0.69). The positive predictive v
alue and the specificity for the identification of current Mycoplasma
pneumoniae infection using a single acute-phase serum were 49.3% and 8
6.9%, respectively, for the microparticle agglutination method, compar
ed to 91.3% and 97.7% for the antibody-capture EIA method (p < 0.001).
The negative predictive value and the sensitivity were 86.3% and 48.1
% for the microparticle agglutination, not significantly different fro
m the corresponding values of 86.5% and 61.2% for the antibody-capture
EIA. It is concluded that the overall agreement between the two metho
ds tested is good, but not perfect. The methods complement each other
in the identification of Mycoplasma pneumoniae as the causative agent
in patients with community-acquired pneumonia.