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A collaborative study to establish the 1st WHO International Standard for human cytomegalovirus for nucleic acid amplification technology

Authors :
Diana Hardie
Richard L. Hodinka
Cristina Olivo
William D. Rawlinson
Jacqueline Prieto
Pantelis Constantoulakis
Céline Bressollette-Bodin
Alan Heath
Craig Corcoran
Angela M. Caliendo
Fredrik Müller
Jacqueline F. Fryer
Malcolm Guiver
Naoki Inoue
Jon Bible
Nell S. Lurain
Guy Boivin
David R. Hillyard
Fausto Baldanti
Klaus Hamprecht
Tiziana Lazzarotto
Lee Sung
Marie L. Landry
Thomas Grewing
Harald H. Kessler
Philip D. Minor
Anton M. van Loon
Valeria Ghisetti
Claire Atkinson
Sophie Alain
Jutta K. Preiksaitis
Isabella Abbate
Margaret Gulley
Shiaolan Ho
Xiao-Li Pang
C. Barranger
Rob Schuurman
Maria Rosaria Capobianchi
Fryer, Jf
Heath, Ab
Minor, Pd
Kessler, H
Rawlinson, W
Boivin, G
Preiksaitis, J
Pang, Xl
Barranger, C
Alain, S
Bressollette-Bodin, C
Hamprecht, K
Grewing, T
Constantoulakis, P
Ghisetti, V
Capobianchi, Mr
Abbate, I
Olivo, C
Lazzarotto, T
Baldanti, F
Inoue, N
Müller, F
Corcoran, C
Hardie, D
Prieto, J
Schuurman, R
van Loon, A
Ho, S
Hillyard, D
Hodinka, R
Louise Landry, M
Caliendo, A
Lurain, N
Sung, L
Gulley, M
Atkinson, C
Bible, J
Guiver, M.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Variability in the performance of nucleic acid amplification technology (NAT)-based assays presents a significant problem in the diagnosis and management of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infections. Here we describe a collaborative study to evaluate the suitability of candidate reference materials to harmonize HCMV viral load measurements in a wide range of NAT assays. Candidate materials comprised lyophilized Merlin virus, liquid Merlin virus, liquid AD169 virus, and purified HCMV Merlin DNA cloned into a bacterial artificial chromosome. Variability in the laboratory mean HCMV concentrations determined for virus samples across the different assays was 2 log10. Variability for the purified DNA sample was higher (>3 log10). The agreement between laboratories was markedly improved when the potencies of the liquid virus samples were expressed relative to the lyophilized virus candidate. In contrast, the agreement between laboratories for the purified DNA sample was not improved. Results indicated the suitability of the lyophilized Merlin virus preparation as the 1st WHO International Standard for HCMV for NAT. It was established in October 2010, with an assigned potency of 5 × 106 International Units (IU) (NIBSC code 09/162). It is intended to be used to calibrate secondary references, used in HCMV NAT assays, in IU.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e94881ebbc73f4aba2d0bc727621d653