Potential impact of different cytomegalovirus (CMV) IgM assays on an algorithm requiring IgM reactivity as a criterion for measuring CMV IgG avidity.

Clin Vaccine Immunol

ARUP Institute for Clinical and Experimental Pathology, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA Department of Pathology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

Published: June 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how different assays for CMV IgM impact an algorithm that determines which CMV IgG-positive serum samples should be tested for avidity, indicating recent infection.
  • It compares four different IgM testing methods: BIFA, EIA, ELFA, and CIA, and finds significant discrepancies in the number of IgM-positive samples identified by each method.
  • The results reveal that relying solely on IgM reactivity to assess CMV IgG avidity may lead to missing some acute CMV infections due to varying sensitivity among the assays.

Article Abstract

The measurement of cytomegalovirus (CMV) IgG avidity is a powerful tool for identifying individuals with recent CMV infection. Because such patients are expected to be positive for CMV IgM, several investigators have suggested that CMV IgG-positive sera first be screened for CMV IgM and then only the IgM-reactive sera be tested for avidity. We investigated the impact of different CMV IgM assays on such a reflexing algorithm using a panel of 369 consecutive IgG-positive serum samples submitted for avidity testing. A bead-based immunofluorescent assay (BIFA) identified 105 IgM-positive serum samples, whereas an IgM-capture enzyme immunoassay (EIA) identified 48 IgM-positive serum samples; this marked difference led us to evaluate additional CMV IgM assays. An enzyme-linked immunofluorescent assay (ELFA) and a chemiluminescent immunoassay (CIA) were used to test all sera with discordant BIFA/EIA results, all sera with concordant positive results, and selected sera with concordant negative results. The findings indicated that the ELFA would identify 74 CMV IgM-positive samples and the CIA would identify 64. Of the 23 low-avidity serum samples, 2 were IgM negative by BIFA, 3 by ELFA and CIA, and 4 by EIA; of the 23 intermediate-avidity serum samples, 6 were IgM negative by BIFA, 10 by ELFA, and 15 by EIA and CIA. In both these avidity groups, BIFA IgM-negative sera were also negative by the other 3 assays. These findings demonstrate that an algorithm requiring CMV IgM reactivity as a criterion for CMV IgG avidity testing does not identify all low-avidity sera and thus misses some cases of acute CMV infection.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4054234PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/CVI.00106-14DOI Listing

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