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False-Positive Results with a Commercially Available West Nile Virus
Immunoglobulin M Assay --- United States, 2008
In September 2008, CDC, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and state
health departments began a nationwide investigation into an increase in
false-positive test results obtained with a commercially available West Nile
virus (WNV) immunoglobulin M (IgM) capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA). The investigation revealed that, in the United States, one lot of
the commercially available test kits was the source of the false-positive
results (1). That lot was recalled, and a second lot distributed
outside the United States also was recalled (1). During July
1--September 30, 2008, the kit lot implicated in the United States resulted
in positive tests on 568 specimens collected from 518 patients in 42 states
and the District of Columbia (DC). A total of 166 (29%) specimens were
retested at CDC, and 119 (72%) had false-positive results. A higher
false-positive percentage were found among patients without evidence of
neuroinvasive disease (77%) than patients with evidence of neuroinvasive
disease (47%). Of the 518 patients, 249 (48%) had been reported to CDC as
persons with WNV disease; however, only 45 (18%) had confirmatory testing
that supported their inclusion in national surveillance data. Commercially
available WNV test kits should be used to determine a presumptive diagnosis
of WNV neuroinvasive disease. These kits should not be used to test specimens
from persons without compatible illness, and any positive result should be
confirmed by additional testing at a state health department or CDC. WNV infection is a nationally notifiable disease. Cases of WNV disease are
reported by state health departments to CDC through ArboNET, an
Internet-based, passive surveillance system.*
Cases reported to ArboNET must have clinical evidence of compatible illness
and laboratory evidence of recent WNV infection (2). Based on
patients' clinical signs and symptoms, WNV cases are classified as
neuroinvasive disease (i.e., encephalitis, meningitis, or acute flaccid
paralysis) or nonneuroinvasive disease (i.e., other febrile illness). Four
FDA-cleared WNV serologic assays are commercially available for use in the
United States. These assays are labeled for use on serum to aid in a
presumptive diagnosis of WNV infection in patients who have clinical symptoms
consistent with neuroinvasive disease. According to product inserts (3--6),
all positive results obtained with these assays should be confirmed by plaque
reduction neutralization test (PRNT) or by using current CDC guidelines for
laboratory diagnosis of this disease (7). Initial
Investigation In summer 2008, three state health departments independently contacted CDC
regarding positive WNV IgM antibody test results in patients who lacked
clinical or epidemiologic evidence of WNV infection. All of these tests
results originated from one large commercial laboratory that was using the
PanBio WNV IgM ELISA test kit manufactured by Inverness Medical (Princeton,
New Jersey). On September 5, 2008, the New York State Department of Health's
Wadsworth Center laboratory reported that 13 (86%) of 15 specimens testing
positive for WNV IgM antibodies at the commercial laboratory in August were
negative upon retesting at the state laboratory. On September 10, CDC
notified all state health departments of the potential problem and initiated
an investigation into the cause of the false-positive test results (1).
In late September, one of the affected commercial laboratories sent a
convenience sample of 64 specimens that had yielded positive or negative WNV
IgM antibodies results to CDC and the kit's manufacturer for retesting. This
evaluation identified two lots of the kit with higher false-positive rates
(20% and 56%) than the expected rate calculated from data in the package
insert (2% [95% confidence interval = 0%--9%]). On October 8, these
two lots were recalled voluntarily by the manufacturer. The lot with the 56%
false-positive rate had been distributed to four laboratories in the United
States and was used for testing specimens during July--September (Figure 1). The other lot was
distributed outside the United States (1). On October 14, a CDC health
advisory was distributed (1), and the investigation was expanded to
determine the scope and impact of the problem in the United States. Expanded
Investigation In September, CDC, along with state and local health departments, surveyed
the four laboratories that had received the recalled kit lot to determine the
number of positive specimens obtained using the lot and to collect
corresponding demographic information regarding these patients. State health
departments provided additional information regarding WNV confirmatory
testing performed in state laboratories, patient clinical syndromes (e.g.,
neuroinvasive or nonneuroinvasive), and case status as reported to ArboNET. The recalled WNV ELISA kit lot had produced positive results for 568
specimens obtained from 518 patients in 42 states and DC (Figure 2). Of the 488 patients for
whom clinical information was known, 83 (17%) had symptoms consistent with
WNV neuroinvasive disease, 242 (50%) had symptoms consistent with
nonneuroinvasive disease, and 163 (33%) had no symptoms consistent with WNV
disease. During October--December, 166 (29%) available specimens of the 568 that
tested positive with the implicated kit lot were identified and sent to CDC
to be retested using WNV IgM microsphere immunofluorescence assay (MIA) and
IgM capture ELISA.â€
Based on retesting, specimens were classified as false-positive,
true-positive, or indeterminate. Of the 166 retested, 45 (27%) were
classified as true-positive and 119 (72%) as false-positive results; two
specimens had an indeterminate result. The retested specimens came from 160
patients; clinical syndrome was known for 157 of these patients. Of the 157,
a higher percentage of false-positives was found among patients without
evidence of neuroinvasive disease (77% [98 of 127]) than among patients with
evidence of neuroinvasive disease (47% [14 of 30)]) (p<0.001 by chi-square
test). Of the 518 patients testing positive for WNV with the implicated kit lot,
249 (48%) had been reported to ArboNET as having WNV disease. However, only
45 (18%) of these 249 cases had confirmatory testing supporting their
inclusion as WNV disease cases; 77 (31%) cases did not have evidence of WNV
infection based on subsequent laboratory testing, and 127 (51%) cases had no
further testing performed. For the remaining 269 (52%) of the 518 patients,
case investigation by state health departments found no illness clinically
compatible with WNV disease; therefore, these patients were not reported to
ArboNET. Reported by: DF Neitzel, MS, MM Kemperman, MPH,
Minnesota Dept of Health. S Semple, MS, New Jersey Dept of Health and Senior
Svcs. S Wong, PhD, Wadsworth Center; J Hallisey, MPH, New York State Dept of
Health. MA Feist, TK Miller, MPH, North Dakota Dept of Health. WM Chung, MD,
Dallas County Dept of Health and Human Svcs. S Hojvat, PhD, P Summers, MS,
Food and Drug Admin. RS Lanciotti, PhD, AJ Panella, MPH, J Laven, O Kosoy, MS,
JA Lehman, RS Nasci, PhD, M Fischer, MD, JE Staples, MD, Arboviral Diseases
Br, E Zielinski-Gutierrez, DrPH, Div of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases,
National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric Diseases; KB Janusz,
DVM, EIS Officer, CDC. Editorial Note:
After detection of WNV in the United States in 1999, diagnostic testing
initially was performed only at CDC and later at state public health
laboratories. In recent years, commercially available WNV diagnostic assays
have been offered at an increasing number of commercial laboratories (8).
Positive test results obtained using these assays help provide a presumptive
diagnosis of WNV infection in patients with neuroinvasive disease; however,
all positive assay results should be confirmed by further laboratory testing
(3--6). This investigation determined that use of one WNV IgM ELISA kit lot at
four laboratories in the United States produced a substantial number of
false-positive test results and inflated the number of WNV disease cases
initially reported to ArboNET for 2008. The manufacturer voluntarily recalled
the implicated lot and is working with FDA to improve the quality control and
batch release procedures for its WNV IgM ELISA kits. In accordance with
Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) regulations, commercial
laboratories that perform diagnostic testing, including for WNV, also should
monitor the ongoing performance of the kits they use (9,10). Before
this investigation, confirmatory testing had been performed on <10% of the
568 specimens that had tested positive with the recalled kit lot. Health-care
providers should consider that commercially available WNV IgM kits are only
intended to help provide a presumptive diagnosis of WNV neuroinvasive disease
when requesting testing and interpreting the results. In addition, commercial
laboratories should work with public health laboratories to ensure that
confirmatory testing is performed on all presumptive positive results. The findings in this report are subject to at least two limitations.
First, only 29% of the specimens that tested positive at CDC were available
for retesting, limiting the precision with which the actual number and
proportion of false-positive tests could be determined. Second, the impact of
false-positive results on patient diagnosis and management was not assessed. This multistate investigation required a considerable public health
response to notify health-care providers, retest specimens, and reevaluate
WNV cases reported to ArboNET. Applying the 72% false-positive proportion to
all 568 specimens testing positive with the recalled kit lot, an estimated
400 specimens were incorrectly identified as positive for WNV IgM antibodies.
Given that large proportion of false-positives, CDC recommended that state
health departments not classify patients as having WNV disease if the only
laboratory evidence was from the recalled kit lot. States have since
reevaluated affected cases to arrive at the final WNV disease totals for 2008
(available at http://www.cdc.gov/westnile). Acknowledgments
This report is based, in part, on contributions of members of the WNV
False-Positive IgM ELISA Investigation Team, which includes state and local
vector-borne disease coordinators and state public health laboratory workers.
References
* Available at http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/westnile/index.htm. â€
An additional 58 (10%) of the 568 positive specimens were retested at state
public health laboratories. Various assays were used; therefore, the results
are not directly comparable to those from CDC. Nonetheless, of the 58
retested, a percentage similar to that found at CDC (64%) had false-positive
results. In addition, false-positive percentages similar to those found at
CDC were detected in persons without evidence of neuroinvasive disease (88%)
and with evidence of neuroinvasive disease (33%) (p<0.001 by chi-square). FIGURE 1. Number of specimens (N = 568) testing
positive for West Nile virus immunoglobulin M antibodies, using one lot from
a commercially available test kit that was later recalled, by week --- United
States, July--September 2008
Alternative Text: The figure above shows the 568
specimens testing positive for West Nile virus immunoglobulin M antibodies,
using one lot from a commercially available test kit that was later recalled,
by week of test in the United States from July through September 2008. From
the week beginning July 14 to the week beginning August 25, 40 to 120
specimens tested positive. After one large laboratory stopped using the kit
lot on September 1, the number testing positive dereased sharply. The
affected kit lot was recalled by the manufacturer the week beginning
September 29. FIGURE 2. Number of persons (N = 518) testing
positive for West Nile virus immunoglobulin M antibodies using one lot from a
commercially available test kit that was later recalled --- United States,
July--September 2008
Alternative Text: The figure is a map of the United
States showing the 518 persons testing positive for West Nile virus
immunoglobulin M antibodies, using one lot from a commercially available test
kit that was later recalled, by state, from July through September 2008. The
number of persons per state ranged from zero to more than 30.
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reviewed: 5/7/2009 |
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