AI Article Synopsis

  • Dengue virus infection triggers immune responses, including the production of antibodies against non-structural protein 1 (NS1), detectable soon after infection.
  • The CYD-TDV vaccine, developed by Sanofi Pasteur, is a live, attenuated vaccine that does not express NS1, prompting an evaluation of NS1-specific IgG antibodies as indicators of dengue exposure in individuals vaccinated with CYD-TDV.
  • A quantitative ELISA for anti-dengue NS1 IgG showed high accuracy in identifying past dengue infections, achieving over 93% agreement in serostatus classification in paired samples, though some misclassification occurred potentially due to asymptomatic infections and variations in the assay results.

Article Abstract

Dengue virus infection elicits immune responses to multiple viral antigens including antibodies to dengue non-structural protein 1 (NS1) which are rapidly induced and detected within days of infection. The recombinant, live, attenuated, tetravalent dengue vaccine (CYD-TDV; Sanofi Pasteur) uses the yellow fever vaccine virus as a back-bone but expresses dengue virus pre-membrane and envelop proteins. Since CYD-TDV does not express dengue NS1, we evaluated the utility of dengue NS1-specific IgG antibodies as biomarkers of dengue exposure in CYD-TDV recipients and controls. We optimized and evaluated a quantitative anti-dengue NS1 IgG enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Parameters assessed included: accuracy, dilutability/linearity, precision, limit of quantitation and specificity. The assay specificity was further evaluated using Japanese Encephalitis virus, West Nile virus, Yellow Fever virus or Zika virus positive sera samples collected following confirmed infection or vaccination. Receiver-operating-characteristics (ROC) curves as well as sensitivity and specificity for discriminating previous dengue exposure were assessed using 1250 reference samples. Overall, the anti-dengue NS1 IgG ELISA was able to discriminate previous dengue exposure from non-exposure before vaccination with CYD-TDV (ROC area under the curve > 0.9). Assessment of paired samples from 2511 vaccinated participants showed high overall agreement (93%) between pre-vaccination and post-vaccination dengue serostatus classification based on the anti-dengue NS1 IgG ELISA. However, misclassification of dengue serostatus was observed after vaccination likely due to a combination of asymptomatic dengue infections, assay variability and a modest effect of CYD-TDV on the anti-dengue NS1 IgG ELISA readout.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jviromet.2018.03.007DOI Listing

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