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1.
J Virol Methods ; 308: 114590, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35878654

ABSTRACT

Virus neutralization assays, widely used to detect and quantify antibodies induced by virus infection, are considered the gold standard for enterovirus serology testing. Conventional microneutralization assays have been used to assess enterovirus D68 (EV-D68) seroprevalence. While manual or automated 96-well assays are valuable, higher-density assays that increase throughput provide the opportunity to more efficiently screen large, population-based serology collections, as well as to test sample sets against multiple virus strains on the same plate or within the same run. Here, automation was implemented for bulk reagent dispensing, serial dilutions, and luminescence measurement to develop a 384-well enterovirus microneutralization assay that increases overall testing throughput, maintains the reproducibility of the standard 96-well assay, and reduces sample volume usage. EV-D68 strains Fermon, 14-18953, and 18-23087 were used to evaluate the automated 384-well microneutralization assay and compare to the conventional 96-well assay. Sensitivity and specificity were evaluated using pooled human sera and positive and negative control antisera. The Lower Limit of quantitation (LLOQ) was the same as for the 96-well assay and coefficients of variations (CV) of 7.35 %, 5.97 %, and 2.85 % for the three EV-D68 strains respectively, were well below the typical goal of ≤ 20 % CV for accuracy. Z-factor analysis yielded results of 0.694, 0.638, and 0.852, for the three EV-D68 strains respectively, indicating a high level of precision, reliability, and robustness. Intra-assay (7.25 %) and inter-assay (7.12 %) variability were well below 20 % CV. Moreover, the 96-well and 384-well versions of the assay were highly concordant, with a 0.955 correlation coefficient in titers obtained for 50 sera tested. Validation of this automated 384-well microneutralization will support its use in large serology screens assessing the presence of EV-D68 neutralizing antibodies in human populations.


Subject(s)
Enterovirus D, Human , Enterovirus Infections , Antibodies, Neutralizing/analysis , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Seroepidemiologic Studies
2.
Pediatr Infect Dis J ; 34(1): 52-4, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25229269

ABSTRACT

Neonatal enteroviral sepsis is a potentially fatal condition. Perinatally acquired infection and severe coagulopathy can be associated with a poor clinical outcome, and antiviral therapy is currently unavailable. Pocapavir (V-073) is an investigational drug candidate being developed for poliovirus indications, but also has variable antiviral activity against nonpolio enteroviruses. We describe the first use of pocapavir in treating a case of severe neonatal enteroviral sepsis due to Coxsackievirus B3.


Subject(s)
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Enterovirus B, Human/isolation & purification , Enterovirus Infections/drug therapy , Sepsis/drug therapy , Enterovirus Infections/virology , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Poliovirus , Sepsis/virology , Treatment Outcome
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