Abstract
"HITAZYME C. pneumoniae" (or "HITAZYME CPN", for short) is a diagnostic reagent that has been recently developed by adopting an ELISA method for detection of anti-Chlamydia pneumoniae (C. pneumoniae) antibodies. When this reagent is used under a current diagnostic standard that has been set as a provisional standard, however, high antibody positive rates are often produced for both IgG and IgA even using the specimens of healthy persons. So, it is difficult to distinguish C. pneumoniae-infected patients from healthy persons. Therefore, this time, we tried to establish a new diagnostic standard by setting up of special cut-off values for a single serum and rise rates of antibody titers for paired sera to improve the accuracy for diagnosis of C. pneumoniae infection. For a single serum testing, we set a special cut-off value at ID 3.00 for both IgG and IgA, so that most healthy persons fall within the range of the "negative" zone. This value was based on the calculation of "Mean+2SD" using measurement results (or IDs) of healthy persons. When this cut-off value was applied, the rate of > or = ID 3.00 for either IgG or IgA was 7.6% for healthy persons, and 64.9% for infected patients. (The rate reached 76.4% when the highest IDs of multiple specimens taken from each patient for this test were used in calculation) As a diagnostic standard for a single serum, therefore, it was defined that: "If ID is 3.00 or greater for IgG and/or IgA, it is highly likely that the case has an acute or a present infection." Using paired sera, we could confirm almost a linear relationship between the results by HITAZYME CPN and those by micro-IF method. Under micro-If method, if the antibody titer increases four times or greater using paired sera, acute infection is diagnosed. As it was found that the four-fold increase in antibody titer corresponds to the increase of 1.35 in ID for IgG and 1.00 for IgA, we defined a diagnostic standard for paired sera as follows: "If ID increases by 1.35 or greater for IgG, and/or if ID increases by 1.00 or greater for IgA, the case may be diagnosed as acute infection."
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More From: Kansenshogaku zasshi. The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases
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