Seminested RT-PCR achieved a 53% detection rate for EV71 directly in clinical specimens, compared to only 20% using cell culture isolation.
Observational
Clinical specimens from children affected by a hand, foot, and mouth disease outbreak in Singapore in 2000.
Reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) with universal and EV71-specific primers vs Cell culture isolation
Detection rate of EV71 in clinical specimens
Absolute Event Rate: 53% vs 20%
A recent outbreak of hand, foot, and mouth disease in Singapore in 2000 affected several thousand children and resulted in four deaths. The aim of this study was to determine the applicability of reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) with universal pan-enterovirus primers and enterovirus 71 (EV71) type-specific primers for the direct detection of enteroviruses in clinical specimens derived from this outbreak. With the universal primers, EV71 RNA sequences were successfully detected by RT-PCR and direct sequencing in 71% of positive specimens. Three pairs of EV71 type-specific primers were evaluated for rapid detection of EV71 directly from clinical specimens and cell culture isolates. By using a seminested RT-PCR strategy, specific identification of EV71 sequences directly in clinical specimens was achieved, with a detection rate of 53%. In contrast, cell culture could isolate EV71 in only 20% of positive specimens. EV71 was detected directly from brain, heart, and lung specimens of two deceased siblings. Although more than one type of enterovirus was identified in clinical specimens from this outbreak, 90% of the enteroviruses were confirmed as EV71. The data demonstrate the clinical applicability of pan-enterovirus and seminested RT-PCR for the detection of EV71 RNA directly from clinical specimens in an outbreak situation.
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Sunita Singh
Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics
Vincent Chow
Tarumanagara University
Meng Chee Phoon
National University of Singapore
Journal of Clinical Microbiology
National University of Singapore
Singapore General Hospital
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Singh et al. (Thu,) conducted a observational in Hand, foot, and mouth disease. Reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) with universal and EV71-specific primers vs. Cell culture isolation was evaluated on Detection rate of EV71 in clinical specimens. Seminested RT-PCR achieved a 53% detection rate for EV71 directly in clinical specimens, compared to only 20% using cell culture isolation.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a208d253f9b8cb80cc63f39 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.40.8.2823-2827.2002