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William F Carman a West of Scotland Regional Virus Laboratory,
Gartnavel General Hospital, Glasgow G12 0YN, b Tweeddale
Medical Practice, Fort William PH33 6EU, c Scottish Centre for
Infection and Environmental Health, Glasgow G3 7LN, d Dingwall Health Centre,
Dingwall IV15 9QS
Correspondence to: W F Carman w.carman{at}vir.ac.uk
The annual outbreak of influenza in Scotland is monitored
by sentinel general practices, which report influenza-like illness. We
piloted real time virological surveillance to investigate whether polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
1 2
is useful for
monitoring an outbreak while it is evolving; to compare PCR with two
standard techniques Six practices took part. Influenza-like illness was defined by
using standard criteria. Combined nose and throat swabs were submitted
in both lysis buffer3 and viral transport medium. Two
serum samples were taken a minimum of three weeks apart. All samples
were posted to the laboratory. Influenza A and B reverse transcription
PCR was performed on both media.3 Primary rhesus monkey
kidney cells (Biowhittaker, Wokingham) were used to isolate virus.
Influenza A and B antibodies were measured using the complement fixation test.
Patients were aged 17 to 72 years (mean 50.5 years), comprising 104 women and 64 men. Samples were taken 1-21 (mean 5.3) days after onset
of illness, although 84% of samples were taken within seven days of
onset.
culture and serology; and to compare two media for submitting samples.
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Methods and results
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Methods and results
Comment
References

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Date of arrival of samples (line graph) at the laboratory and
dates of reporting results for polymerase chain reaction, virus
culture, and serology (bar charts)
PCR results were available within 36 hours of sample arrival,
culture took at least a week, and serology took a minimum of three
weeks in this study (figure). Overall, 112 (67%) patients had
influenza infection that was confirmed by the laboratory. Of 168 samples, 97 were positive for PCR (57% overall): 84 for influenza A
and 13 for influenza B. Nineteen of these also had positive results by
culture. Of 153 patients tested serologically, 94 (61%) showed a
rising or high (
128) titre. Fifteen patients with positive serology
had negative results with PCR; nine of these had their swabs taken
eight or more days after onset of illness. Excluding samples taken
after eight days, the sensitivity of PCR compared with any positive
diagnosis (PCR, serology, and culture) was 94.2%. Conversely, 12 patients had positive results with PCR, but had negative results with
serology. Thus, serology sensitivity compared with any positive result
was 88.7%.
An additional 10% of samples were positive by PCR in lysis buffer alone.
Five of 13 samples that were negative for influenza and that were
submitted in the first two weeks of the study were later confirmed by
PCR to be rhinovirus infections.
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Comment |
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Real time surveillance using PCR with a rapid turnaround time confirms that influenza is circulating. As the PCR results were faxed back the next day, there was a stimulus to send in further samples. Results of serology and PCR correlated well, although serology took three weeks longer (figure). No false positives were generated by PCR. Culture was insensitive and slow because of the variation between batches of the primary cell line used in this laboratory. The time since onset of illness is critical for the sensitivity of virus isolation and PCR. In the late phase of illness, when results of culture and PCR were negative, there was already a high antibody titre.
Although culture is required to accumulate virus isolates for antigenic
characterisation of the circulating viruses, PCR should now be the
front line assay for diagnosis of influenza, even in non-specialist
laboratories after initial training. It is clear that additional
pathogens cause influenza-like illness, and the introduction of a
multiplex PCR to test for a wider number of pathogens
2 4
will considerably improve surveillance of the winter respiratory
burden. New treatments for influenza strengthen the case for improved
virological surveillance to alert clinicians to the cause of
influenza-like illness and for rapid diagnosis and appropriate
treatment of individual cases.
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Acknowledgments |
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We acknowledge the hard work performed by the staff of the participating general practices.
Contributors: WFC, LAW, JDD, JM, AN, and PC designed and carried out the study. LAW and JW did the laboratory work. SM coordinated sample collection in all practices. LAW and WFC wrote the paper. WFC guarantees the paper.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: The Scottish Centre for Infection and Environmental Health provided partial financial support.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. | Atmar RL, Baxter BD, Dominguez EA, Taber LH. Comparison of reverse transcription-PCR with tissue culture and other rapid diagnostic assays for detection of type A influenza virus. J Clin Microbiol 1996; 34: 2604-2606[Abstract]. |
| 2. |
Stockton J, Ellis JS, Saville M, Clewley JP, Zambon MC.
Multiplex PCR for typing and subtyping influenza and respiratory syncytial viruses.
J Clin Microbiol
1998;
36:
2990-2995 |
| 3. | Wallace LA, McAulay KA, Douglas JDM, Elder AG, Stott DJ, Carman WF. Influenza diagnosis: from dark isolation into the molecular light. J Infect 1999; 39: 221-226[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 4. |
Grondahl B, Puppe W, Hoppe A, Kuhne I, Weigl JA, Schmitt HJ.
Rapid identification of nine microorganisms causing acute respiratory tract infections by single-tube multiplex reverse transcription-PCR: feasibility study.
J Clin Microbiol
1999;
37:
1-7 |
(Accepted 28 March 2000)
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