Effect of Testing for IgG Avidity in the Diagnosis of Toxoplasma gondii Infection in Pregnant Women: Experience in a US Reference Laboratory

The usefulness of testing for IgG avidity in association with Toxoplasma gondii was evaluated in a US reference laboratory. European investigators have reported that high-avidity IgG toxoplasma antibodies exclude acute infection in the preceding 3 months. In this US study, 125 serum samples taken fr...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of infectious diseases 2001-04, Vol.183 (8), p.1248-1253
Hauptverfasser: Liesenfeld, Oliver, Montoya, Jose G., Kinney, Sandra, Press, Cynthia, Remington, Jack S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The usefulness of testing for IgG avidity in association with Toxoplasma gondii was evaluated in a US reference laboratory. European investigators have reported that high-avidity IgG toxoplasma antibodies exclude acute infection in the preceding 3 months. In this US study, 125 serum samples taken from 125 pregnant women in the first trimester were chosen retrospectively, because either the IgM or differential agglutination (AC/HS) test in the Toxoplasma serologic profile suggested or was equivocal for a recently acquired infection. Of 93 (74.4%) serum samples with either positive or equivocal results in the IgM ELISA, 52 (55.9%) had high-avidity antibodies, which suggests that the infection probably was acquired before gestation. Of 87 (69.6%) serum samples with an acute or equivocal result in the AC/HS test, 35 (40.2%) had high-avidity antibodies. Forty women were given spiramycin, to prevent congenital transmission, and 7 (17.5%) had high-avidity antibodies. These findings highlight the value of testing a single serum sample obtained in the first trimester of pregnancy for IgG avidity
ISSN:0022-1899
1537-6613
DOI:10.1086/319672