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. 2020 Nov 18;58(12):e01926-19. doi: 10.1128/JCM.01926-19

TABLE 2.

Characteristics of laboratory tests used to diagnose arbovirus infections

Modality Strength(s) Weakness(es) Sensitivity (%) Specificity (%) Reference(s)
Serology
    ELISA
        IgM capture Decreased rates of false positivity from nonspecific antibody binding
Decreased rates of false negativity from competition with preexisting IgG
Cross-reactivity with other members of the same family
Persistence of IgM for >1 yr in some cases
CDC, 84 94 39, 62
         Commercial assays, 98–100a 92–97 24
        Indirect IgG Fourfold rise in titer identifies recent infection in the presence of preexisting IgM Cross-reactivity with other members of the same family
Long-lasting IgG from prior infections
CDC, 84 39
     LDT,c 40 94 58
     Commercial, 100a 83 42
    IgG avidity assay Allows for differentiation of recent from past infection No commercially available tests
    PRNT Quantifies neutralizing antibodies Requires highly trained staff
     Highly specific Requires biosafety level 3 conditions
     Unaffected by history of prior infections Slow turnaround time
    IFA As sensitive as MAC ELISA Subjective interpretation IgM, 96–100b 66–100 50, 66
IgG, 92–100b 42–90 42, 57
    MIA Can be highly multiplexed Not commercially available 98 96 42, 57
    IHC Useful for confirmatory diagnosis when tissue is available Limited data on sensitivity and specificity
Molecular diagnostics
    qRT-PCR   High analytic sensitivity and specificity
Rapid turnaround time
High throughput
Limited by short time period of viral replication Serum, 14 100 70
Whole blood, 87b 100 71
CSF, 57 100 70
Urine, 44 100 72
    mNGS No prior hypothesis on the target pathogen necessary Low throughput
Limited by short time period of viral replication
a

Relative to the CDC ELISA.

b

Relative to commercial or laboratory-developed ELISA.

c

LDT, laboratory-developed test.