Scientific Reports (Apr 2021)

Detection of chronic wasting disease in mule and white-tailed deer by RT-QuIC analysis of outer ear

  • Natalia C. Ferreira,
  • Jorge M. Charco,
  • Jakob Plagenz,
  • Christina D. Orru,
  • Nathanial D. Denkers,
  • Michael A. Metrick,
  • Andrew G. Hughson,
  • Karen A. Griffin,
  • Brent Race,
  • Edward A. Hoover,
  • Joaquín Castilla,
  • Tracy A. Nichols,
  • Michael W. Miller,
  • Byron Caughey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-87295-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Efforts to contain the spread of chronic wasting disease (CWD), a fatal, contagious prion disease of cervids, would be aided by the availability of additional diagnostic tools. RT-QuIC assays allow ultrasensitive detection of prion seeds in a wide variety of cervid tissues, fluids and excreta. The best documented antemortem diagnostic test involving RT-QuIC analysis targets lymphoid tissue in rectal biopsies. Here we have tested a more easily accessed specimen, ear pinna punches, using an improved RT-QuIC assay involving iron oxide magnetic extraction to detect CWD infections in asymptomatic mule and white-tailed deer. Comparison of multiple parts of the ear pinna indicated that a central punch spanning the auricular nerve provided the most consistent detection of CWD infection. When compared to results obtained from gold-standard retropharyngeal lymph node specimens, our RT-QuIC analyses of ear samples provided apparent diagnostic sensitivity (81%) and specificity (91%) that rivaled, or improved upon, those observed in previous analyses of rectal biopsies using RT-QuIC. These results provide evidence that RT-QuIC analysis of ear pinna punches may be a useful approach to detecting CWD infections in cervids.