Abstract

To evaluate the potential of dried blood spots (DBS) as a congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) testing specimen, the laboratory diagnostic accuracy of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on DBS was compared to viral urine cultures from neonates suspected for cCMV. Two different extraction methods (EasyMAG, bioMérieux versus Qiagen) and 2 real-time PCR protocols (in-house versus Argene) were compared. We were able to collect both DBS and urine samples in 6 Belgian neonatal units from 276 neonates suspected for cCMV registered in CMVREG (an online neonatal registry system). Forty-eight neonates (17.4%) were positive by viral culture in urine. Laboratory diagnostic accuracy parameters of DBS-PCR were both extraction method and PCR protocol dependent. Not all DBS-CMV-PCR methods successfully detected urine-culture–positive neonates born after first-trimester seroconversions. Interestingly, however, all urine-culture–positive neonates having clinical signs of cCMV did consistently score positive.

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