IgM Pada Thypoid
IgM Pada Thypoid
IgM Pada Thypoid
656659
Copyright 0 1997 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Abstract.
The objective of this study was to investigate the longevity of positive dot enzyme iminunosorbent
assay (dot EIA) results for 1gM and IgG to a Salmonella typhi outer membrane protein in Malaysian children with
enteric fever. The patients were children one month to 12 years of age with clinical evidence of typhoid fever, positive
blood or stool cultures for S. typhi, and/or a positive Widal test result who were admitted over a two-year period to
General Hospital (Kota Bharu, Malaysia). These patients received standard inpatient treatment for enteric fever in
cluding chloramphenicol
therapy for 14 days. Dot EIA tests were performed as part of clinical and laboratory as
sessments on admission, at two weeks, and then at 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, and 21 months postdischarge.
Assessment of
the longevity of positive dot EIA 1gM and IgG titers was done by Kaplan-Meier analysis. In 94 evaluable patients,
28% were dot ELA 1gM positive but IgG negative on admission, 50% were both 1gM and IgG positive, and 22%
were 1gM negative and IgG positive. Mean persistence of 1gM dot EIA positivity was 2.6 months (95% confidence
interval = 2.03.1 months) and that of IgG was 5.4 months (4.56.3 months). There were no significant differences
between the three subgroups. Thus, positive 1gM and IgG results determined by dot EIA within four and seven
months, respectively, following documented or suspected enteric fever in a child from an endemic area should be
interpreted with caution. In other clinical situations, the dot EIA remains a rapid and reliable aid to diagnosis.
burgdorferi
infections
can
sometimes
be
positive in Malaysian
highly endemic area.
is a function
of the clinical
features
Thus,
for different
infective
agents
typhi
or a positive
Widal
test
result
(significant
titer
1:
many
of the ill
and clinical
fever from a
with entenc
years, while the relationship between IgG and 1gM in the serum
at presentation
children
situa
656
LONGEVITY
OF ANTIBODY
RESPONSE
657
TO S. TYPHI OMP
Percent positive
T@me 1
Details of the groups of patients classified by initial dot-enzyme
immunoassay results
Group 1
*1gM
2
Group 1
(IgM+IIgG)Group (1gM and lgG+)Group
(lgMIlgG+)Number2647Age
@l9G]
(years),21mean
3.0Sex(MIF)12/1421/2612/9Duration
3.17.5
SD8.0
2.37.1
fever(days),
of
7Blood mean SD12
culture posi
71
712
1
.5
(%)54%57%52%Widal
tive
0 antigen Ii
.5
5,'..
ter,
median1:3201:1601:80*(range)(01
1,280)(01:640)Widal
:1,280)(01 :
H antigen ti
ter,
median1:6401:3201:320(range)(1
,280)(01:1,280)a
:401
:640)(01 : 1
@
Group 2
and 2.
ff@gM
lgG
St
A two-tailed
of 1gM
and
IgG
levels
level of significance
between
patient
St
V
St
St
icx
Group 3
*1gM
lgG
80
60 e@'
St
St
St
40
5,
.5.
20
@, p
24
810
12
1416
18
20
groups.
Time (months)
was used.
FIGURE 1.
RESULTS
Percentage
of patients
with
positive
dot enzyme
im
and Group
3 had only
positive
IgO titers
on admis
sion.
3 patients were those who were 1gM negative but IgG pos
itive. Details of these groups are summarized in Table 1. The
groups had similar demographic characteristics
and features
related to typhoid fever except that those who were initially
1gM negative (Group 3) had significantly
lower Widal 0
antibody titers than those in the other two groups.
Figure 1 shows the serial changes in positivity for both
1gM and IgG antibodies by dot EIA over the period of fol
low-up. In Group 1, there was a decrease in the percentage
658
100
TABLE 2
[@Group
- Group
80
A Censored
a)
>
positiveAll
U)
0
0.
60
1gM positive
patients2.6
lgG
5.4 [4.56.3]
(n = 82; 3 censored)
[2.03.1]
censored)Group (n = 75; 2
at
12.3
4.7 [2.96.5]
[1.63.0]
censored)Group (n = 26; 2
22.7
[1.93.4]
censored)Group (n
47; 0
3
a) 40
C.)
20
(n = 14; 0 censored)
5.8 [4.66.9]
(n = 47; 3 censored)
4.9 [3.06.81
(n = 2)
a Censored
cases
are those
who
(n = 21; 0 censored)
were
positive
initially
or during
follow-up
but defaulted
[@Group 1
a)
>
- - Group
S..
Group
a Censored
values
in
DISCUSSION
In
0
0.
CD
at
C
a)
C.)
a)
0.
10
12
14
16
18
20
Time (months)
FIGURE 2.
Persistence
curves
dot
ade
of patients who were 1gM positive such that all were nega
tive by six months. Less than half of this group became IgG
positive during this time and the decrease in the number of
IgG-positive cases was slower than for 1gM. This latter trend
was also observed in Group 2. In Group 3, only two patients
or just under 10% became 1gM positive during follow-up.
Persistance curves for 1gM and IgG are shown in Figure
2 and the results of Kaplan-Meier
analysis are summarized
in Table 2. Only two (2.7%) of 75 patients who tested 1gM
positive during the study defaulted from follow-up before
they became antibody negative (Figure 2). In the case of
IgG, this was the case in only three (3.7%) of 82 cases. The
mean persistance of detectable 1gM antibody in patients who
tested positive at any time during the study period was 2.6
months, with the majority of patients becoming negative
within three months of the positive result. There were no
significant differences in mean persistance value between
subgroups (P = 0.88), but because of insufficient numbers,
Group 3 was not included in analysis. For IgG, the mean
persistance of antibody positivity was approximately
twice
as long as that for 1gM (5.4 months), with most patients
becoming negative six months after initial assessment. There
was a nonsignificant
trend to shorter persistance times for
(with
Widal
a negative
1gM result by dot EIA and a de
anti-O titer) than children
in the other two
by dot
EIA
at presentation,
the development
of a
positive IgG test result occurred in less than half during fol
low-up. This may have been due partly to the sampling sched
ule, with some patients possibly exhibiting a transiently pos
itive IgG test result between assessments. However, given the
mean and 95% confidence intervals for persistance time of an
IgG response in the three groups compared with the 2.5-3month gap between samples, such a contribution would ap
pear limited. Thus, there appears to be a proportion of patients
(approximately
10% of the total series) who do not develop
IgG antibodies to the OMP as detected by the dot EIA.
Two patients in Group 3 who were initially 1gM negative
and IgG positive subsequently developed positive 1gM test
results. This could indicate that these patients had a residual
positive IgG titer from a previous episode of enteric fever
and redeveloped significant 1gM titers from the new infec
tion. Other unexpected patterns also emerged during follow
LONGEVITY
OF ANTIBODY
observations
that
are
consistent
with
the
se
over
the
previous
seven
months,
and
has
suggestive
RESPONSE
659
TO S. TYPHI OMP
1. Chow CB, Wang PS, Cheung MW, Yan WW, Leung NK, 1987.
Diagnostic value of the Widal test in childhood typhoid fever.
Pediatr infect Dis J 6: 914917.
2. Choo KE, Razif AR, Oppenheimer
typhoid
fever in endemic
areas.
J Paediatr
Child
of an an
immunosor
of typhoid
fever
area. Clin inftct
by dot enzyme
immunoassay
Dis 19: 172176.
5, Lebech
AM, Karisson
M, Svenungsson
epidemica
as measured
by a recombinant
anti
burgdoiferi
in Lyme disease.
infect