Abstract

• An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed to detect specific human immunoglobulin G and M antibodies to sandfly fever Sicilian (SFS) virus. Acute and early convalescent serum pairs with ⩾ 7 days between the 2 specimens were available from 20 patients and all showed significant optical density (OD) increase and significant titre rise (⩾ 4-fold) by IgG ELISA. However, negative or borderline-positive sera were found as late as 11 days after onset of symptoms when tested by IgG ELISA. • Specific IgM antibodies were detected during the first week of symptoms, and maximum OD values were obtained during the first 4 weeks after onset of disease. The IgM OD values declined over the following 3–9 months. All sera collected later than 14 months post-onset were negative by IgM ELISA. • The combination of early antibody response and the need to test only one serum specimen gives IgM ELISA an advantage over IgG ELISA in patient diagnosis. • The IgG ELISA was also evaluated as a seroepidemiological tool and compared to a plaque reduction neutralization test (PRNT) using sera from a normal Cypriot population. Of 183 sera tested, 34 (19%) were positive in plaque reduction neutralization tests (PRNT) and 113 (62%) by IgG ELISA. A number of PRNT-negative sera were strongly positive by IgG ELISA and also by indirect immunofluorescence test, which may suggest the presence of a virus related to SFS in Cyprus which has not yet been isolated.

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