ACID DISSOCIATION OF IMMUNE-COMPLEXES IMPROVES DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY OF P24 ANTIGEN-DETECTION IN PERINATALLY ACQUIRED HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS INFECTION
Tc. Quinn et al., ACID DISSOCIATION OF IMMUNE-COMPLEXES IMPROVES DIAGNOSTIC UTILITY OF P24 ANTIGEN-DETECTION IN PERINATALLY ACQUIRED HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS INFECTION, The Journal of infectious diseases, 167(5), 1993, pp. 1193-1196
Since acid treatment of serum is known to disrupt immune complexes, th
e diagnostic utility of the p24 antigen assay was examined after acid
treatment of 345 serum samples from 158 children born to women infecte
d with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Although the p24 antigen as
say after acid treatment was negative in 9 HIV-1-infected children <1
week old, antigen was detectable at high levels in all 30 samples obta
ined from infected children 1-9 months old. Overall, antigen was posit
ive in 145 (sensitivity 89.5%) of 162 samples from 47 HIV-1-infected c
hildren greater-than-or-equal-to 1 month old. In contrast, the sensiti
vity of the p24 antigen assay without acid dissociation was only 18% (
P < .001). Among the 76 uninfected children, 132 (specificity 99.2%) o
f 133 specimens were p24 antigen-negative after acid dissociation. The
se results demonstrate that acid treatment of serum markedly improves
the sensitivity and predictive value of the p24 antigen assay for diag
nosis of perinatally acquired HIV-1 infection in children 1 month of a
ge or older.