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Agreement Study Between Two Laboratories of Immunofluorescence As a Confirmatory Test for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Antibody Screening

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Specialty Microbiology
Date 1989 Jun 1
PMID 2666438
Citations 2
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Abstract

A total of 114 serum specimens from 76 blood donors, 21 patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome or acquired immune deficiency syndrome-related complex, 7 multiply transfused patients, 3 hemophiliacs, and 7 others were tested for anti-human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) antibody by enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and Western blot (WB) and then blindly tested by immunofluorescence (IF), independently, in two separate laboratories. The IF technique used acetone-fixed HIV-1-infected E cells and uninfected HUT-78 cells mixed at a 1:3 ratio in one spot on a glass slide and uninfected HUT-78 cells (to assess nonspecific fluorescence) alone in a second spot. Of 114 serum specimens, 85 were repeat EIA positive, and 21 of these were WB positive. A total of 129 of 134 of the IF results (included were 20 duplicates) were identical between laboratories, for a Kappa agreement statistic of 0.93. All five IF results discordant between laboratories were EIA repeat positive and WB negative. Included in the study were eight WB-indeterminate sera, of which five blood donor serum specimens and one hemophiliac serum specimen were IF negative and two acquired immune deficiency syndrome serum specimens were IF positive. As a confirmatory test for HIV-1 antibodies, IF provided a faster alternative or supplementary test for confirming EIA results.

Citing Articles

Advantages of a human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) persistently infected HeLa T4+ cell line for HIV-1 indirect immunofluorescence serology.

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PMID: 1939583 PMC: 270311. DOI: 10.1128/jcm.29.10.2266-2272.1991.


Evaluation of an indirect immunofluorescence assay for confirmation of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 antibody in U.S. blood donor sera.

Sullivan M, Mucke H, Kadey S, Fang C, Williams A J Clin Microbiol. 1992; 30(9):2509-10.

PMID: 1401028 PMC: 265538. DOI: 10.1128/jcm.30.9.2509-2510.1992.

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