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244. Development, Qualification, and Clinical Validation of an Immunodiagnostic assay for the Detection of 11 Additional S. pneumoniae Serotype-Specific Polysaccharides in Human Urine

BACKGROUND: Identifying Streptococcus pneumoniae (Sp) serotypes by urinary antigen detection assay (UAD) is the most sensitive and specific way to evaluate the changing epidemiology of non-bacteremic community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and efficacy of pneumococcal vaccines. We first described an UAD...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Vincent. Kalina, Warren, Souza, Victor, Wu, Kangjian, Giardina, Peter, McKeen, Andrew, Jiang, Qin, Tan, Charles, Ren, Yanhua, Belanger, Kelly, McElhiney, Sue, Unnithan, Manu, Cheng, Huiming, Giordano-Schmidt, Donna, Gessner, Bradford D, Jansen, Kathrin U, Pride, Michael W
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6809965/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.319
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Identifying Streptococcus pneumoniae (Sp) serotypes by urinary antigen detection assay (UAD) is the most sensitive and specific way to evaluate the changing epidemiology of non-bacteremic community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and efficacy of pneumococcal vaccines. We first described an UAD to detect the Sp serotypes 1,-3,-4,-5,-6A,-6B,-7F,-9V,-14,-18C,-19A,-19F,-23F covered by the 13-valent Sp conjugate vaccine PCV13. To assess the pneumococcal disease burden of additional serotypes, a UAD-2 assay was developed to diagnose 11 additional Sp serotypes (-2,-8,-9N,-10A,-11A,-12F,-15B,-17F,-20,-22F,-33F). METHODS: UAD-2 specificity was achieved by capturing highly purified pneumococcal polysaccharides with serotype-specific monoclonal antibodies using Luminex technology. Assay qualification assessed accuracy, precision, and sample linearity. Serotype positivity was based on cutoffs determined by non-parametric statistical evaluation of urine samples from individuals without pneumococcal disease. Clinical sensitivity and specificity of the positivity cutoffs were assessed in a clinical validation. RESULTS: The UAD-2 was shown to be specific and reproducible. Clinical validation using urine samples from invasive disease patients demonstrated assay sensitivity and specificity of 92.2% and 95.9%, respectively compared with a gold standard of isolating and typing (by Quellung) Sp bacteria from patient samples. Analysis of 11,087 CAP patients showed a UAD-2 and UAD-1 serotype prevalence of 4.33% and 4.60%, respectively (bacteremic and non-bacteremic CAP combined). CONCLUSION: The qualified/clinically validated UAD-2 method has applicability in understanding the epidemiology of nonbacteremic Sp CAP as well as assessing vaccine efficacy of future pneumococcal conjugate vaccines. DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.