Evaluation of three serological assays for the diagnosis of Mycobacterium bovis infection in brushtail possums

Authors: Pfeiffer DU, McCarthy AR, Jackson R, Aldwell FE, Nolan A, Buddle BM, Heslop J
Publication: New Zealand Veterinary Journal, Volume 43, Issue 3, pp 91-95, Jun 1995
Publisher: Taylor and Francis

Animal type: Possum, Wildlife
Subject Terms: Bacterial, Clinical pathology, Diagnostic procedures, Mycobacterial, Disease/defect, Zoonosis, Infectious disease, Public health
Article class: Scientific Article
Abstract: Three serological tests for the diagnosis of Mycobacterium bovis infection were evaluated on 29 possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) with tuberculosis and on 100 possums from a tuberculosis-free area. An indirect ELISA using M. bovis culture filtrate as the antigen had a sensitivity of 45% and a specificity of 96%, while an indirect ELISA using a M. bovis specific antigen (MPB70) had a sensitivity of 21% and a specificity of 98%. A blocking ELISA which utilised a monoclonal antibody against MPB70 had a sensitivity of 28% and a specificity of 99%. Combination of the test results of the three ELISAs resulted in an increase in sensitivity to 51% and a decrease in specificity to 93%. A previous study has shown that possums experimentally infected with M. bovis produced cellular responses to M. bovis antigens relatively early in the infection, but these responses decreased in the terminal stages of the disease. In contrast, analysis of serological responses in the current study from sequentially collected sera of possums experimentally and naturally infected with M. bovis showed that antibody was first detected late in the disease.
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