Comparison of 3 Diagnostic Tests for the Detection of and spp. in Asymptomatic Dogs ().

J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci

Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • A team found infections in puppies and needed a fast, cost-effective test to screen asymptomatic dogs for two specific organisms, aiming to prevent outbreaks and protect staff.
  • They tested dog feces using three diagnostic methods: a lateral-flow assay (QC), a direct fluorescent assay (DFA), and an in-house PCR test, comparing results through different analytical methods.
  • The QC test showed good specificity for detecting the organisms (95-98%), but its sensitivity was lower (38-48% for one organism and 25-40% for the other), indicating that while positive results are reliable, negative results need further confirmation.

Article Abstract

After detecting and infections and coinfections in 2 litters of puppies in our vivarium, our team realized that we needed a simple, quick, and economical point-of-care test for concurrent screening of asymptomatic dogs for both organisms. Periodic screening of colony dogs and of all dogs introduced into a colony can prevent the spread of and to immunologically naïve animals and help keep staff safe from these zoonotic organisms. To compare methods for diagnosing and spp. in dogs, we used a convenience sampling of feces from 2 popula- tions of dogs; samples were tested with a lateral-flow assay (QC), a commercially-available direct fluorescent assay (DFA), and an inhouse PCR test using established primers. QC results were analyzed in 2 ways: 1) relative to a reference standard that permitted comparative interpretation of DFA and PCR results; and 2) using Bayesian analysis for comparison independent of a reference standard. The QC test showed good specificity for the detection of according to both the reference standard (95%) and the Bayesian analysis (98%). Similarly, specificity of the QC for the detection of was 95% according to the reference standard and 97% according to Bayesian analysis. However, the sensitivity of the QC test was much lower for both (reference standard, 38%; Bayesian analysis, 48%) and (25% and 40%, respectively). This study demonstrates that the QC test can be used to detect both and in dogs and that positive results can be accepted with confidence, whereas negative tests should be confirmed through secondary testing methods.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10078926PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.30802/AALAS-JAALAS-22-000108DOI Listing

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