Title of article :
Comparative Evaluation and Measure of Accuracy of ELISAs, CLIAs, and ECLIAs for the Detection of HIV Infection among Blood Donors in China
Author/Authors :
Chang, Le National Center for Clinical Laboratories - Beijing Hospital - National Center of Gerontology - Institute of Geriatric Medicine - Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China , Zhao, Junpeng National Center for Clinical Laboratories - Beijing Hospital - National Center of Gerontology - Institute of Geriatric Medicine - Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China , Guo, Fei National Center for Clinical Laboratories - Beijing Hospital - National Center of Gerontology - Institute of Geriatric Medicine - Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China , Ji, Huimin National Center for Clinical Laboratories - Beijing Hospital - National Center of Gerontology - Institute of Geriatric Medicine - Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China , Zhang, Lu National Center for Clinical Laboratories - Beijing Hospital - National Center of Gerontology - Institute of Geriatric Medicine - Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China , Jiang, Xinyi National Center for Clinical Laboratories - Beijing Hospital - National Center of Gerontology - Institute of Geriatric Medicine - Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China , Wang, Lunan National Center for Clinical Laboratories - Beijing Hospital - National Center of Gerontology - Institute of Geriatric Medicine - Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China
Pages :
9
From page :
1
To page :
9
Abstract :
Background Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) is the only serological method approved for blood screening in China. Automated chemiluminescence immunoassay (CLIA) and electrochemiluminescence immunoassay (ECLIA) had been used in clinical laboratories but not applied to screen HIV among blood donors. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of ELISA, CLIA, and ECLIA, focusing on the feasibility of CLIA/ECLIA for blood screening. Method 1029 blood donations from 14 blood centers screened by ELISA were enrolled in the study. All plasma samples were tested by eight ELISA assays in 16 blood centers, followed by the detection of CLIA and ECLIA methods in the National Center for Clinical Laboratories (NCCL), further confirmed by nucleic acid testing (NAT) and Western blot (WB). Results Of 1029 samples, 136 were confirmed as HIV positive. CLIA and ECLIA assay had similar sensitivities with ELISAs but showed higher specificity (CLIA: 99.1%, 885/893; ECLIA: 99.0%, 884/893), concordance rate (CLIA: 99.2%, 1021/1029; ECLIA: 99.1%, 1020/1029), and positive predictive value (PPV) (CLIA: 94.4%, 136/144; ECLIA: 93.8%, 136/145) than most of ELISA kits (>5 ELISAs) (P < 0.05). Kappa values of CLIA (0.967) and ECLIA (0.963) were the highest among all the serologic assays. Among 451 samples with initial ELISA reactivity, 315 were negatives, of which 307 (97.5%) and 306 (97.1%) were detected as nonreactive by CLIA (8 nonspecific reactions) and ECLIA (9 nonspecific reactions), respectively. Conclusion Compared with ELISA, CLIA and ECLIA are more specific and accurate in detecting HIV antibody/antigen and can keep more nonspecifically reactive donors detected by ELISA. CLIA and ECLIA can be used for the improvement of serological blood screening strategy to avoid the unnecessary loss of blood donors.
Keywords :
Comparative Evaluation , Measure of Accuracy of ELISAs , CLIAs , ECLIAs , HIV Infection
Journal title :
Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology
Serial Year :
2020
Full Text URL :
Record number :
2618336
Link To Document :
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