| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6134076 | Journal of Virological Methods | 2013 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
In countries with limited resources, infants infected with HIV are highly exposed to CMV co-infection which probably represents a major risk factor for disease progression in this population. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of a low cost CMV DNA extraction method from DBS and the feasibility of its implementation in laboratories of 4 countries with limited resources. DNA was extracted from DBS with a cationic resin (chelex 100) and amplified with an “in house” real time CMV PCR. Dilutions of a quantified whole blood sample were spotted on paper to evaluate the 95% detection limit. A DBS quality control panel was analyzed in all laboratories. CMV PCR was compared between DBS and liquid whole blood (gold standard) in 2 populations: 418 transplanted patients and 59 infants infected with HIV (median age of 2 months). The CMV PCR 95% detection limit in DBS was 3.87Â log10Â copies/mL. Its positive and negative predictive values for CMV diagnosis in infants infected with HIV were 100% and 87.5% respectively. Quality control panels gave consistent qualitative results in all laboratories. This assay had high predictive values for CMV diagnosis in infants infected with HIV and its implementation in resource-limited countries with limited resources is feasible.
Keywords
Related Topics
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Immunology and Microbiology
Virology
Authors
Marianne Leruez-Ville, Sopeak Ngin, Tiffany Guilleminot, Anfumbom Kfutwah, Sandrine Moussa, Ton Tran, Eric Nerrienet,
