An immunocapture assay was developed to detect Toxoplasma gondii-specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) in sera from adults with acute acquired infection or reactivation and from babies with congenital toxoplasmosis. The components of this assay were monoclonal antibody to human IgE, samples from patients, and T. gondii tachyzoites treated with Formalin. When T. gondu-specific IgE antibodies were present, visually detectable agglutination occurred. Sera, umbilical cord blood, fetal blood, cerebrospinal fluid, and amniotic fluid were tested by this method. Specific IgE antibodies were detected in sera from 25 (86%) of 29 adults who developed specific IgG antibody during pregnancy or had specific IgA and IgM antibodies. Specific IgE was present early during infection, at the time that IgM antibodies were present, and slightly preceding the presence of specific IgA antibodies. In 23 patients tested serially, IgE antibodies never persisted for longer than 4 months. No nonspecific anti-T. gondii IgE was detected in sera from uninfected individuals. Maternal IgE antibodies did not cross the placenta. In sera of patients with congenital toxoplasmosis, specific IgE antibodies were found at birth, during the first year of life, and during immunologic recrudescence following discontinuation of pyrimethamine-sulfonamide therapy. The IgE immunocapture assay is simple to perform. It is especially useful for determining when T. gondu was acquired by recently infected pregnant women.
The diagnosis of Toxoplasma gondii infection is currently based on immunological tests, but tests for IgG and IgM antibodies alone are often insufficient to assess the risk of active disease, especially during pregnancy and in immunodeficient subjects. The supplementary diagnostic value of testing for antitoxoplasmic IgA in cases of acute, chronic, congenital and reactivated toxoplasmosis, relative to classical immunological tests, was evaluated using two immunocapture tests, one based on tachyzoite agglutination and the other on an immunoenzymatic complex recognizing the membrane protein P30 of Toxoplasma gondii. A total of 4,541 sera from 395 uninfected subjects, 468 immunized subjects with chronic infection, 117 subjects with acute infection and 403 children, 103 of whom had congenital toxoplasmosis, was tested. Specific IgA tests were negative in the nonimmune population, but tests for this immunoglobulin subtype became positive very rapidly during primary infection, and IgA disappeared more rapidly than IgM. In the children infected in utero, specific IgA was detected more frequently than IgM. In contrast, in a population of HIV-seropositive subjects with clinical toxoplasmosis, tests for IgA were poorly sensitive. The two tests for specific IgA produced similar results, except in the early stages of primary infection, in which immunoenzymatic testing for anti-P30 IgA was less sensitive than the agglutination method.
The clinical value of immunoenzymatic (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) detection of anti-Toxoplasma immunoglobulin E (IgE) was assessed by studying 2,036 sera from 792 subjects, comprising seronegative controls and subjects with acute, active, reactivated, or congenital toxoplasmosis. Included were nonimmunized adults; pregnant women with recently acquired infection (acute toxoplasmosis); immunocompetent subjects with recently acquired severe infection (active toxoplasmosis) expressed as fever, adenopathies, splenomegaly, pneumonia, meningitis, or disseminated infection; subjects-some of them immunocompromised-whose previously moderate IgG antibody levels rose, suggesting a reactivation of quiescent toxoplasmosis; and infants born to seroconverted mothers and evaluated for diagnosis of congenital infection and therapeutic management. Specific IgE antibodies were never detected in seronegative subjects. They were present in 85.7% of asymptomatic seroconverters and in 100% of seroconverters with overt toxoplasmosis, following two different kinetics: in the former, the specific IgE titer generally presented a brief peak 2 to 3 months postinfection and then fell rapidly, whereas specific IgE persisted at a very high titer for several months in the latter. IgE emerged concomitantly with the increase in IgG during toxoplasmic reactivation. For neonatal diagnosis of congenital toxoplasmosis, IgE was less informative than IgM and IgA (sensitivities, 59.5, 64.3, and 76.2%, respectively) and had a specificity of 91.9%. Nevertheless, simultaneous measurement of the three isotypes at birth improved the diagnostic yield to 81% relative to the combination of IgA and IgM. Emergence of specific IgE during postnatal treatment for congenital toxoplasmosis is a sign of poor adherence or inadequate dosing.Toxoplasmosis, a cosmopolitan protozoan disease, is often asymptomatic in humans. Its diagnosis is mainly based on serological tests. Classically, serodiagnosis includes titration of specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) (showing past exposure) and screening for specific IgM, which is suggestive of recent exposure or ongoing active infection (17). However, IgM antibody detection can be due to naturally interfering IgM (15) or to the persistence of IgM for a long time after primary infection. Conversely, the IgM assay can be negative in patients with secondary reactivation or congenital toxoplasmosis (3, 6). Although anti-Toxoplasma IgA antibodies are also informative (i.e., no natural IgA), they can persist for 暇6 months after infection, making it difficult to determine the precise date of infection in pregnant women (8, 9). There is therefore growing interest in the use of IgE in this setting (1,10,14,18,22). Given the major role of Toxoplasma gondii P30 membrane protein in early antibody synthesis (4), we have used an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) based on a monoclonal anti-P30 antibody to screen for specific IgE.The aim of this study was to determine the kinetics of antiToxoplasma IgE in ELISA and the clinical value of...
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology was used to detect Toxoplasma gondii DNA in 253 immunodeficient subjects, 179 of whom were infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The incidence of toxoplasmosis was 12.3% (22/179) in the HIV-infected subjects and 2.7% (2/74) in the remainder. The sensitivity of the PCR during episodes of toxoplasmosis in HIV-infected subjects not on antiparasitic treatment was 86.6% on peripheral blood and 60% on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), but was only 25% and 16.7%, respectively, in subjects receiving specific treatment or prophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii. Among the HIV-seronegative population, six patients undergoing anticancer chemotherapy were PCR positive on bronchoalveolar lavage fluid but did not develop pulmonary toxoplasmosis, suggesting transient carriage.
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