Scientific Reports (Oct 2022)

A performance comparison between fluorescent immunoassay and immunochromatography for rapid dengue detection in clinical specimens

  • Kriangsak Ruchusatsawat,
  • Tanawat Benjamungkalarak,
  • Naruphong Phunikom,
  • Husneeyah Vateh,
  • Ekasit Kowitdamrong,
  • Jongkonnee Wongpiyabovorn,
  • Siwaporn Boonyasuppayakorn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-21581-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Dengue virus (DENV 1–4) infection has been a global health threat where no specific treatment is currently available. Therefore, a rapid and accurate diagnosis is critical for an appropriate management as it could reduce the burden of severe clinical manifestation. Currently, dengue immunochromatography (IC) is commonly used to primarily differentiate acute febrile illnesses. Fluorescent immunoassay (FIA) utilized a highly sensitive detection system and claimed 70–100% sensitivity and 83.5–91.7% specificity for dengue infection in a preliminary report. This report recruited samples with acute febrile illnesses sent for dengue screening and tested IC and FIA in parallel. The performance of both tests was verified by a definitive diagnosis retrieved from combinatorial reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for IgM and IgG confirmation tests. Results showed that the viral nonstructural protein (NS1) performance of FIA was slightly higher than IC with the sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV, agreement, kappa, and its standard error at 79.11, 92.28, 86.81, 87.31, 352 (87.13%), 0.725 ± 0.035, respectively; whereas those of the IC were at 76.58, 92.28, 86.43, 85.98, 348 (86.14%), 0.703 ± 0.037, respectively. Moreover, the IgM and IgG performance of FIA had higher specificity, PPV, and agreement than the IgM IC performance, suggesting that the FIA was more specific but less sensitive for antibody detection. No correlation was observed in IgM and IgG levels of ELISA and FIA assays. In conclusion, the FIA and IC were highly sensitive, specific, and substantially agreed in NS1 detection but moderately agreed in IgM and IgG detection.