The diagnosis of Toxoplasma gondii infection is currently based on immunological tests, but tests for IgG and IgM antibodies alone are often insufficient to assess the risk of active disease, especially during pregnancy and in immunodeficient subjects. The supplementary diagnostic value of testing for antitoxoplasmic IgA in cases of acute, chronic, congenital and reactivated toxoplasmosis, relative to classical immunological tests, was evaluated using two immunocapture tests, one based on tachyzoite agglutination and the other on an immunoenzymatic complex recognizing the membrane protein P30 of Toxoplasma gondii. A total of 4,541 sera from 395 uninfected subjects, 468 immunized subjects with chronic infection, 117 subjects with acute infection and 403 children, 103 of whom had congenital toxoplasmosis, was tested. Specific IgA tests were negative in the nonimmune population, but tests for this immunoglobulin subtype became positive very rapidly during primary infection, and IgA disappeared more rapidly than IgM. In the children infected in utero, specific IgA was detected more frequently than IgM. In contrast, in a population of HIV-seropositive subjects with clinical toxoplasmosis, tests for IgA were poorly sensitive. The two tests for specific IgA produced similar results, except in the early stages of primary infection, in which immunoenzymatic testing for anti-P30 IgA was less sensitive than the agglutination method.
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology was used to detect Toxoplasma gondii DNA in 253 immunodeficient subjects, 179 of whom were infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The incidence of toxoplasmosis was 12.3% (22/179) in the HIV-infected subjects and 2.7% (2/74) in the remainder. The sensitivity of the PCR during episodes of toxoplasmosis in HIV-infected subjects not on antiparasitic treatment was 86.6% on peripheral blood and 60% on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), but was only 25% and 16.7%, respectively, in subjects receiving specific treatment or prophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii. Among the HIV-seronegative population, six patients undergoing anticancer chemotherapy were PCR positive on bronchoalveolar lavage fluid but did not develop pulmonary toxoplasmosis, suggesting transient carriage.
Two hundred and sixty‐one pregnant women underwent prenatal screening by cordocentesis and/or amniocentesis between 1987 and 1994. The following tests were used: (i) detection of anti‐Toxoplasma gondii IgM, IgA, and IgE antibodies by immunocapture and the comparative immunological profile method based on enzyme‐linked immunofiltration assay of fetal blood and (ii) direct detection of the parasite in cell culture and by mouse inoculation with fetal blood (FB) and/or amniotic fluid (AF). Of the 31 cases of congenital toxoplasmosis, 24 (77 per cent) were detected prenatally. Overall, the FB and AF inoculation methods were the most effective (50 per cent sensitivity with FB inoculation to mice and/or cell culture and 74 per cent with AF). However, antibody detection in FB was the only positive test in three cases. Of 18 surviving children diagnosed prenatally, only one developed chorioretinitis (9 months of age). Seven newborns (23 per cent) with negative prenatal tests were diagnosed by postnatal laboratory monitoring, but none of these children developed clinical toxoplasmosis. There may have been more false negatives, as only 48 per cent of unaffected children were followed up for at least 12 months. All the tests had a specificity of 100 per cent. Fetal blood sampling has considerable value but also carries some risks and is currently being abandoned in favour of amniocentesis alone with gene amplification and mouse inoculation. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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