Abstract

An evaluation of fluorescence polarization assay (FPA) to detect antibodies against Brucella melitensis according to the Mexican Official Norm (NOM) was performed. In this study, a total of 2582 goat serum samples from a high-prevalence area in northeast Mexico where vaccination is applied, were used. Of these, 1094 were classified as NOM negatives (card test (CT) negatives or CT positives/complement fixation test (CFT) negatives) and 1488 as NOM positives (CT and CFT positives). The receiver operator characteristics (ROC) curve analysis was used to obtain the FPA sensitivity (83.5%), specificity (82.2%) and accuracy (88.2%) compared with NOM criteria, using a cut-off value of 89 mP for positive samples. In addition, FPA produced 84.1% of negative results versus 65.7% of CT using 1094 CFT negative samples, which indicated that FPA performance was better than CT to detect negative samples or differentiate samples from vaccinated animals. Finally, FPA showed 95.8% sensitivity when using 702 negative non-vaccinated samples. Taken together, these results suggested that FPA might replace CT as a screening test for its better performance compared with CFT, its adjustable cut-off useful in different epidemiological situations, and for its reliability, ease of performance, comparable cost with CT regimen, and potential application in field and high-throughput laboratories. The use of FPA as screening test will help to reduce the percentage of goats wrongly slaughtered because of brucellosis misdiagnosis. More studies on FPA are required for its approval as diagnostic tool for goat brucellosis.

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