PLoS ONE (Aug 2010)

Serological response in RT-PCR confirmed H1N1-2009 influenza a by hemagglutination inhibition and virus neutralization assays: an observational study.

  • Mark I Chen,
  • Ian G Barr,
  • Gerald C H Koh,
  • Vernon J Lee,
  • Caroline P S Lee,
  • Robert Shaw,
  • Cui Lin,
  • Jonathan Yap,
  • Alex R Cook,
  • Boon Huan Tan,
  • Jin Phang Loh,
  • Timothy Barkham,
  • Vincent T K Chow,
  • Raymond T P Lin,
  • Yee-Sin Leo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012474
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 8
p. e12474

Abstract

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BackgroundWe describe the serological response following H1N1-2009 influenza A infections confirmed by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR).Methodology and principal findingsThe study included patients admitted to hospital, subjects of a seroepidemiologic cohort study, and participants identified from outbreak studies in Singapore. Baseline (first available blood sample) and follow-up blood samples were analyzed for antibody titers to H1N1-2009 and recently circulating seasonal influenza A virus strains by hemagglutination inhibition (HI) and virus micro-neutralization (VM) assays. 267 samples from 118 cases of H1N1-2009 were analyzed. Geometric mean titers by HI peaked at 123 (95% confidence interval, CI 43-356) between days 30 to 39. The chance of observing seroconversion (four-fold or greater increase of antibodies) was maximized when restricting analysis to 45 participants with baseline sera collected within 5 days of onset and follow-up sera collected 15 or more days after onset; for these participants, 82% and 89% seroconverted to A/California/7/2009 H1N1 by HI and VM respectively. A four-fold or greater increase in cross-reactive antibody titers to seasonal A/Brisbane/59/2007 H1N1, A/Brisbane/10/2007 H3N2 and A/Wisconsin/15/2009 H3N2 occurred in 20%, 18% and 16% of participants respectively.Conclusions and significanceAppropriately timed paired serology detects 80-90% RT-PCR confirmed H1N1-2009; Antibodies from infection with H1N1-2009 cross-reacted with seasonal influenza viruses.