The current recommended method for diagnosing HIV-1 in newborns infected vertically and in adults, during the "window period", is the detection of proviral HIV-1 DNA within leukocytes (buffy coat). This study describes a new portable Dried Buffy Coat Spot (DBCS) assay able to provide a quantitative proviral HIV-1 DNA recovery from the buffy coat. Fifty blood samples were collected from HIV-positive children and processed for DBCSs. Total DNA and proviral DNA were normalised to β-globin and HIV-1 pol genes. Assay sensitivity and specificity were evaluated against the whole blood dried blood spot (DBS) method. Both procedures, using automatic DNA extraction, were compared to a standard whole blood DNA manual extraction. DNA recovery from whole blood was nearly equivalent to that of the DBCS-based extraction, while DBS-based extraction was 10-fold less sensitive. The detection rate of proviral HIV-1 DNA with DBCS assay was equivalent to whole blood manual extraction (100% concordance), but DBS-extracted samples showed limited concordance (44%). The DBCS assay may prove to be more feasible in resource-limited settings. It may represent a simple and robust point-of-care assay for HIV screening of children, for whom a reference test is still lacking. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.

Quantitative recovery of proviral HIV-1 DNA from leukocytes by the Dried Buffy Coat Spot method for real-time PCR determination

Putignani L.
;
2010-01-01

Abstract

The current recommended method for diagnosing HIV-1 in newborns infected vertically and in adults, during the "window period", is the detection of proviral HIV-1 DNA within leukocytes (buffy coat). This study describes a new portable Dried Buffy Coat Spot (DBCS) assay able to provide a quantitative proviral HIV-1 DNA recovery from the buffy coat. Fifty blood samples were collected from HIV-positive children and processed for DBCSs. Total DNA and proviral DNA were normalised to β-globin and HIV-1 pol genes. Assay sensitivity and specificity were evaluated against the whole blood dried blood spot (DBS) method. Both procedures, using automatic DNA extraction, were compared to a standard whole blood DNA manual extraction. DNA recovery from whole blood was nearly equivalent to that of the DBCS-based extraction, while DBS-based extraction was 10-fold less sensitive. The detection rate of proviral HIV-1 DNA with DBCS assay was equivalent to whole blood manual extraction (100% concordance), but DBS-extracted samples showed limited concordance (44%). The DBCS assay may prove to be more feasible in resource-limited settings. It may represent a simple and robust point-of-care assay for HIV screening of children, for whom a reference test is still lacking. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.
2010
DBCS (Dried Buffy Coat Spot)
DBS (Dried Blood Spot)
HIV-1 (human immunodeficiency virus type 1)
HIV-1 pol
Human β-globin
Proviral HIV-1 DNA
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14085/37817
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