Hello. Sign in to personalize your visit. New user? Register now.  
Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases
Evaluation of a Dengue IgG Indirect Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay and a Japanese Encephalitis IgG Indirect Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay for Diagnosis of Secondary Dengue Virus Infection

To cite this article:
Shingo Inoue, Maria T.G. Alonzo, Yae Kurosawa, Cynthia A. Mapua, Joyce D. Reyes, Efren M. Dimaano, Maria Theresa P. Alera, Mariko Saito, Kazunori Oishi, Futoshi Hasebe, Ronald R. Matias, Filipinas F. Natividad, Kouichi Morita. Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases. -Not available-, ahead of print. doi:10.1089/vbz.2008.0153.

Online Ahead of Print: October 29, 2009

Full Text: • HTML • PDF for printing (13,774.1 KB) • PDF w/ links (179 KB)


Shingo Inoue,1,8
Maria T.G. Alonzo,2
Yae Kurosawa,3
Cynthia A. Mapua,4
Joyce D. Reyes,4
Efren M. Dimaano,5
Maria Theresa P. Alera,6
Mariko Saito,7
Kazunori Oishi,2
Futoshi Hasebe,1,8
Ronald R. Matias,4
Filipinas F. Natividad,4 and
Kouichi Morita1,8
1Department of Virology, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Nagasaki University, Nagasaki, Japan.
2Department of Special Pathogens, International Research Center for Infectious Diseases, Research Institute for Microbial Diseases, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.
3Pentax Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan.
4Research and Biotechnology Division, St. Luke's Medical Center, Quezon City, Philippines.
5Blood Borne Disease Ward, San Lazaro Hospital, Manila, Philippines.
6Philippines-AFRIMS Virology Research Unit, Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center, Cebu, Philippines.
7Department of Virology, Graduate School of Medicine, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan.
8Global COE Program, 21st Century COE Program, MEXT, Tokyo, Japan.
Address correspondence to:

Shingo Inoue

Department of Virology

Institute of Tropical Medicine

Nagasaki University
1-12-4, Sakamoto

Nagasaki 852-8523

Japan
E-mail:

Abstract

To establish a new method for the diagnosis of dengue secondary infection, 187 serum samples from the patients with dengue secondary infection, 40 serum samples from the patients with dengue primary infection, and 44 serum samples from the healthy volunteers were tested using the dengue IgG indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (DEN IgG ELISA). The results of the test were compared with those from the dengue hemagglutination inhibition (DEN HI) test, which has been recommended as the gold standard by the World Health Organization (WHO, 1997). Japanese encephalitis IgG indirect ELISA (JE IgG ELISA) was also performed to measure anti-flavivirus IgG, which cross-reacts with the Japanese encephalitis virus, to test the possibility of an alternative to DEN IgG ELISA. The results of DEN IgG and JE IgG ELISAs were highly correlated with those of the DEN HI test. In the DEN IgG ELISA, a titer of 1:29,000 was the cut-off value for the diagnosis of dengue secondary infection (91.5% accuracy [95% confidence interval, CI], 90.9% sensitivity [95%CI], and 92.9% specificity [95%CI]). A titer of 1:52,000 was the cut-off value for dengue secondary infection using JE IgG ELISA (95.6% accuracy [95%CI], 98.9% sensitivity [95%CI], and 88.1% specificity [95%CI]). In conclusion, this study confirmed that the results of both DEN IgG and JE IgG ELISAs were highly correlated with the results of DEN HI test. Thus, these ELISAs are simple, rapid, sensitive, and quantitative tests that can be used in the determination of dengue secondary infection.

Free first page
All articles
Previous Next