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Laboratory evaluation of RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network

BACKGROUND: Early detection of human yellow fever (YF) infection in YF-endemic regions is critical to timely outbreak mitigation. African National Laboratories chiefly rely on serological assays that require confirmation at Regional Reference Laboratories, thus delaying results, which themselves are...

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Autores principales: Basile, Alison J., Niedrig, Matthias, Lambert, Amy J., Meurant, Robyn, Brault, Aaron C., Domingo, Cristina, Goodman, Christin H., Johnson, Barbara W., Mossel, Eric C., Mulders, Mick N., Velez, Jason O., Hughes, Holly R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9481164/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36067233
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010770
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author Basile, Alison J.
Niedrig, Matthias
Lambert, Amy J.
Meurant, Robyn
Brault, Aaron C.
Domingo, Cristina
Goodman, Christin H.
Johnson, Barbara W.
Mossel, Eric C.
Mulders, Mick N.
Velez, Jason O.
Hughes, Holly R.
author_facet Basile, Alison J.
Niedrig, Matthias
Lambert, Amy J.
Meurant, Robyn
Brault, Aaron C.
Domingo, Cristina
Goodman, Christin H.
Johnson, Barbara W.
Mossel, Eric C.
Mulders, Mick N.
Velez, Jason O.
Hughes, Holly R.
author_sort Basile, Alison J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Early detection of human yellow fever (YF) infection in YF-endemic regions is critical to timely outbreak mitigation. African National Laboratories chiefly rely on serological assays that require confirmation at Regional Reference Laboratories, thus delaying results, which themselves are not always definitive often due to antibody cross-reactivity. A positive molecular test result is confirmatory for YF; therefore, a standardized YF molecular assay would facilitate immediate confirmation at National Laboratories. The WHO-coordinated global Eliminate Yellow Fever Epidemics Laboratory Technical Working Group sought to independently evaluate the quality and performance of commercial YF molecular assays relevant to use in countries with endemic YF, in the absence of stringent premarket assessments. This report details a limited laboratory WHO-coordinated evaluation of the altona Diagnostics RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0. METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Specific objectives were to assess the assay’s ability to detect YF virus strains in human serum from YF-endemic regions, determine the potential for interference and cross-reactions, verify the performance claims as stated by the manufacturer, and assess usability. RNA extracted from normal human serum spiked with YF virus showed the assay to be precise with minimal lot-to-lot variation. The 95% limit of detection calculated was approximately 1,245 RNA copies/ml [95% confidence interval 497 to 1,640 copies/ml]. Positive results were obtained with spatially and temporally diverse YF strains. The assay was specific for YF virus, was not subject to endogenous or exogenous interferents, and was clinically sensitive and specific. A review of operational characteristics revealed that a positivity cutoff was not defined in the instructions for use, but otherwise the assay was user-friendly. CONCLUSIONS AND SIGNIFICANCE: The RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 has performance characteristics consistent with the manufacturer’s claims and is suitable for use in YF-endemic regions. Its use is expected to decrease YF outbreak detection times and be instrumental in saving lives.
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spelling pubmed-94811642022-09-17 Laboratory evaluation of RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network Basile, Alison J. Niedrig, Matthias Lambert, Amy J. Meurant, Robyn Brault, Aaron C. Domingo, Cristina Goodman, Christin H. Johnson, Barbara W. Mossel, Eric C. Mulders, Mick N. Velez, Jason O. Hughes, Holly R. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Early detection of human yellow fever (YF) infection in YF-endemic regions is critical to timely outbreak mitigation. African National Laboratories chiefly rely on serological assays that require confirmation at Regional Reference Laboratories, thus delaying results, which themselves are not always definitive often due to antibody cross-reactivity. A positive molecular test result is confirmatory for YF; therefore, a standardized YF molecular assay would facilitate immediate confirmation at National Laboratories. The WHO-coordinated global Eliminate Yellow Fever Epidemics Laboratory Technical Working Group sought to independently evaluate the quality and performance of commercial YF molecular assays relevant to use in countries with endemic YF, in the absence of stringent premarket assessments. This report details a limited laboratory WHO-coordinated evaluation of the altona Diagnostics RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0. METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Specific objectives were to assess the assay’s ability to detect YF virus strains in human serum from YF-endemic regions, determine the potential for interference and cross-reactions, verify the performance claims as stated by the manufacturer, and assess usability. RNA extracted from normal human serum spiked with YF virus showed the assay to be precise with minimal lot-to-lot variation. The 95% limit of detection calculated was approximately 1,245 RNA copies/ml [95% confidence interval 497 to 1,640 copies/ml]. Positive results were obtained with spatially and temporally diverse YF strains. The assay was specific for YF virus, was not subject to endogenous or exogenous interferents, and was clinically sensitive and specific. A review of operational characteristics revealed that a positivity cutoff was not defined in the instructions for use, but otherwise the assay was user-friendly. CONCLUSIONS AND SIGNIFICANCE: The RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 has performance characteristics consistent with the manufacturer’s claims and is suitable for use in YF-endemic regions. Its use is expected to decrease YF outbreak detection times and be instrumental in saving lives. Public Library of Science 2022-09-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9481164/ /pubmed/36067233 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010770 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Basile, Alison J.
Niedrig, Matthias
Lambert, Amy J.
Meurant, Robyn
Brault, Aaron C.
Domingo, Cristina
Goodman, Christin H.
Johnson, Barbara W.
Mossel, Eric C.
Mulders, Mick N.
Velez, Jason O.
Hughes, Holly R.
Laboratory evaluation of RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network
title Laboratory evaluation of RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network
title_full Laboratory evaluation of RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network
title_fullStr Laboratory evaluation of RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network
title_full_unstemmed Laboratory evaluation of RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network
title_short Laboratory evaluation of RealStar Yellow Fever Virus RT-PCR kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network
title_sort laboratory evaluation of realstar yellow fever virus rt-pcr kit 1.0 for potential use in the global yellow fever laboratory network
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9481164/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36067233
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010770
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