Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3369748 Journal of Clinical Virology 2009 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundThe current limitations of laboratory testing for the detection of human herpesvirus virus 6 (HHV-6) in clinical specimens with low HHV-6 viral loads make this area a priority for further research and development.ObjectivesTo develop and validate a sensitive qualitative assay for simultaneous HHV-6 detection and variant differentiation.MethodsWe developed a diagnostic procedure, which combines a magnetic bead-based nucleic acid extraction, PCR amplification, and colorimetric microtiter plate identification (MAG-PCR-EIA), for the sensitive detection of HHV-6 and the simultaneous differentiation of HHV-6A and HHV-6B.ResultsAnalytic sensitivities of the MAG-PCR-EIA assay were 10 copies per reaction for both HHV-6A and HHV-6B variants, which is equivalent to 20 copies/ml when 1 ml of clinical specimen was processed. A proficiency panel containing 11 blinded specimens covering HHV-6A viral loads from 0 to 100,000 copies was tested, and the MAG-PCR-EIA was able to detect the lowest concentration at one copy in 200 μl. A panel of 27 urine specimens, which were collected from patients with and without chronic fatigue syndrome, was tested by the MAG-PCR-EIA. HHV-6 was detected in two (HHV-6A) patients who have chromosomally integrated HHV-6A and in one (HHV-6B) patient who was a healthy control and diagnosed as cervical cancer later on. The HHV-6 results did not correlate with results previously determined by HHV-6 antigenemia in urine.ConclusionWith large specimen volumes processed and an additional signal amplification incorporated, the MAG-PCR-EIA provides a sensitive and qualitative system for HHV-6 detection and simultaneous variant differentiation. Clinical relevance of the assay awaits further investigation.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Authors
, , , , ,