Abstract
Four hundred and ninety-five sera from 325 patients from whom Pseudomonas aeruginosa had been isolated and 86 control sera were tested for antibody by indirect haemagglutination tests (HAT) and complement fixation tests (CFT) using a polyvalent pseudomonas serotype-specific vaccine antigen, PEV-02. Sera were also tested by countercurrent immunoelectrophoresis (CIE) for precipitins to a species-specific protein antigen. Control sera gave titres of 160 or less by HAT and 20 or less by CFT. 2-Mercaptoethanol resistant antibody titres (immunoglobulin G) were below 40 for all control sera and none of the latter contained precipitins to common antigen. Of 325 patients, 156 (48%) gave titres of 320 or greater by HAT and of these, 114 (73%) showed elevated immunoglobulin G titres. Less patients with positive blood cultures than expected were positive by HAT and more patients with bone infections gave raised immunoglobulin G titres than expected. Cystic fibrosis patients were invariably seropositive by all tests. There was a correlation between positive CIE and CFT tests, especially in patients who were positive by HAT. Approximately half of 83 patients tested gave a serotype-specific antibody response. The tests were of little value in confirming clinically evident acute infections, but in cases of doubtful infection they did provide confirmatory evidence of an antibody response in approximately one-third of patients culture-positive for Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
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