Interlaboratory agreement of coccidioidomycosis enzyme immunoassay from two different manufacturers.

Coccidioidomycosis, a fungal infection endemic to the Southwestern United States, is challenging to diagnose. The coccidioidomycosis enzyme immunoassay (EIA) test is the least expensive and simplest to perform to detect coccidioidomycosis antibodies in the serum. Concerns regarding falsely positive immunoglobulin (Ig) M EIA test results have led to questions about the agreement of commercially available EIA test kits among laboratories. We sought to evaluate the laboratory agreement of the EIA test at three laboratories using both IMMY and Meridian EIA test kits. Sensitivity and specificity of EIA IgM and IgG were calculated as secondary outcomes. The percent agreement of the EIA IgM and IgG test results among all three laboratories was 90% and 89% for IMMY test kits, respectively, and 67% and 80.5% for Meridian test kits, respectively. Agreement between IgM and IgG combined test results was 85.5% and 70.5%, for IMMY and Meridian, respectively. Combined IgM and IgG assays demonstrated a sensitivity of 68% (62.7%-76%) and a specificity of 99.3% (98%-100%) [IMMY] and a sensitivity of 72.4% (57.3%-87.3%) and a specificity of 91.3% (74%-100%) [Meridian]. In summary, results from the IMMY EIA test kit agreed more often across laboratories than Meridian EIA results, especially for the IgM assay. Isolated positive IgM EIA results using the Meridian test kit should be interpreted with caution and consideration of clinical information and test methodology. Further study of the sensitivity and specificity of coccidioidomycosis EIA test kits is warranted.

[1]  M. Brandt,et al.  Evaluation of the Specificity of Two Enzyme Immunoassays for Coccidioidomycosis by Using Sera from a Region of Endemicity and a Region of Nonendemicity , 2015, Clinical and Vaccine Immunology.

[2]  Jill Jin JAMA patient page. Valley fever (coccidioidomycosis). , 2013, JAMA.

[3]  George R Thompson,et al.  Coccidioidomycosis: epidemiology , 2013, Clinical epidemiology.

[4]  G. Rutherford,et al.  The Public Health Impact of Coccidioidomycosis in Arizona and California , 2011, International journal of environmental research and public health.

[5]  D. Pappagianis,et al.  False-Positive IgM Serology in Coccidioidomycosis , 2010, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.

[6]  M. Saubolle,et al.  Transmission of Coccidioidomycosis to a Human via a Cat Bite , 2008, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.

[7]  Deborah A. Adams,et al.  Summary of notifiable diseases--United States, 2006. , 2008, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[8]  A. Comrie,et al.  Assessment of Climate– Coccidioidomycosis Model , 2007, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[9]  D. Engelthaler,et al.  Public Health Surveillance for Coccidioidomycosis in Arizona , 2007, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[10]  M. Saubolle,et al.  Epidemiologic, Clinical, and Diagnostic Aspects of Coccidioidomycosis , 2006, Journal of Clinical Microbiology.

[11]  Korine N. Kolivras,et al.  Modeling valley fever (coccidioidomycosis) incidence on the basis of climate conditions , 2003, International journal of biometeorology.

[12]  N. Ampel,et al.  Coccidioidomycosis in Arizona: increase in incidence from 1990 to 1995. , 1998, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[13]  J. Galgiani,et al.  Detection of coccidioidal antibodies by 33-kDa spherule antigen, Coccidioides EIA, and standard serologic tests in sera from patients evaluated for coccidioidomycosis. , 1996, The Journal of infectious diseases.

[14]  T. Jaskowski,et al.  Comparison of commercially available enzyme immunoassay with traditional serological tests for detection of antibodies to Coccidioides immitis , 1995, Journal of clinical microbiology.

[15]  D. Pappagianis,et al.  Comparative evaluation of commercial Premier EIA and microimmunodiffusion and complement fixation tests for Coccidioides immitis antibodies , 1995, Journal of clinical microbiology.

[16]  D. Engelthaler,et al.  Valley fever: finding new places for an old disease: Coccidioides immitis found in Washington State soil associated with recent human infection. , 2015, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[17]  Korine N. Kolivras,et al.  Environmental vVariability and coccidioidomycosis (valley fever) , 2001 .