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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, July 2003, p. 686-691, Vol. 10, No. 4
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.4.686-691.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Detection by Immunofluorescence Assay of Bartonella henselae in Lymph Nodes from Patients with Cat Scratch Disease
J. M. Rolain, F. Gouriet, M. Enea, M. Aboud, and D. Raoult*
Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS UMR 6020A, Faculté de Médecine, Université de la Méditerranée, 13385 Marseille Cedex 05, France
Received 12 February 2003/
Returned for modification 14 April 2003/
Accepted 5 May 2003

ABSTRACT
Laboratory diagnosis of
Bartonella henselae infections can be
accomplished by serology or PCR assay on biopsy samples. The
purpose of our work was to assess immunofluorescence detection
(IFD) in lymph node smears using a specific monoclonal antibody
directed against
B. henselae and a commercial serology assay
(IFA) compared with PCR detection. Among 200 lymph nodes examined
from immunocompetent patients, 54 were positive for
B. henselae by PCR, of which 43 were also positive by IFD. Among the 146
PCR-negative lymph nodes, 11 were positive by IFD. Based on
PCR results, the specificity of this new technique was 92.5%,
the sensitivity was 79.6%, and the positive predictive value
was 79.6%. At a cutoff titer of 64, the sensitivity of the IFA
was 86.8% and the specificity was 74.1%. Diagnosis of cat scratch
disease (CSD) may be improved, with a specificity of 100%, when
the two tests (IFD and IFA) were negative; the sensitivity was
97.4% if one of the two tests was positive. Since PCR-based
detection with biopsy samples is available only in reference
laboratories, we suggest using IFD coupled with the commercial
serology test for the diagnosis of CSD.

INTRODUCTION
Sixteen species within the genus
Bartonella are now characterized,
including three that have been extensively characterized as
human pathogens, i.e.,
B. bacilliformis, the agent of Carrion's
disease (
21),
B. quintana (
31), and
B. henselae (
2).
B. henselae,
a species first recognized in 1990 (
45), is the main etiological
agent of cat scratch disease (CSD) (
35) and is also responsible
for bacillary angiomatosis and peliosis hepatis in immunocompromised
(mainly AIDS) patients (
25), bacteremia, and endocarditis (
2).
Cats are the main reservoir of
B. henselae, and humans may be
contaminated by cat scratches or bites; additionally, the role
of the cat flea (
Ctenocephalides felis) as a vector for human
transmission has been proposed (
2).
Techniques for diagnosing Bartonella-related infections include culturing of the pathogen (7, 24, 27), molecular biology techniques, especially PCR amplification of Bartonella spp. genes (1, 19, 23, 37, 38, 48), and serology (32, 43). Isolation of B. henselae in CSD patients has rarely been achieved (16, 27). Amplification of Bartonella spp. DNA from skin, lymph nodes, granulomatous lesions, osteolytic lesions, or less frequently from other organ biopsies or in leukoclastic vasculitis has been often reported in patients suffering CSD (1, 4, 19, 38, 40, 48) or bacillary angiomatosis (17, 37). PCR-based detection of Bartonella species from human specimens by use of various target genes remains the best method for the diagnosis of CSD. Nevertheless, this technique is only available in reference laboratories and contamination may impair its specificity. Serology is the only noninvasive diagnostic technique and has been evaluated for the diagnosis of CSD (18, 32, 36, 39, 43) and other Bartonella-related infections, including bacteremia (8-10, 22) and endocarditis (12, 15, 30, 33). The sensitivity of serology varies from one laboratory to another, ranging from near 100% to less than 30% (43). Commercially prepared antigen slides are now available for B. henselae and B. quintana serology (18, 20, 34, 39, 44, 46). Accurate diagnosis of CSD is necessary because the presentation and course of the disease may resemble more severe diseases such as malignant tumors or mycobacterial infections.
The purpose of our work was to assess an immunofluorescence assay on lymph node smears using a specific monoclonal antibody (MAb) directed against B. henselae and a commercial serology test in comparison to PCR detection using two different target genes as a reference technique to determine the best strategy for the diagnosis of CSD.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Clinical specimens from patients suspected to have CSD between
October 2001 and October 2002 were included in the study. A
case of definite diagnosis of
B. henselae infection (CSD group)
was defined as a case in which a patient had regional lymphadenitis
and a history of recent cat contact and where direct identification
of a
Bartonella sp. was made by PCR from lymph node tissue by
using two different target genes. A standardized questionnaire
(which gathered information about contact with cats or cat fleas,
fever, cat scratches or bites, cutaneous lesion at the inoculation
site, and treatment) was completed for each patient. When available,
a serum sample from each patient was tested for
Bartonella antibodies
(
32).
All available sera were examined for the presence of anti-B. henselae antibodies by using a commercial immunofluorescence assay (IFA; Focus Technologies, Cypress, Calif.; distributed in France by Eurobio, Paris, France) (32). The slides were prepared with the B. henselae Houston-1 and B. quintana Oklahoma strains grown in Vero cells for detection of immunoglobulin G (IgG). IgG titers of ≥64 were used as cutoffs for B. henselae antigen.
DNA extraction and PCR amplification from lymph nodes.
Total genomic DNA was extracted from samples with a QIAamp tissue kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) as previously described (48). Samples were handled under sterile conditions to avoid the risk of cross-contamination. Genomic DNA was stored at 4°C until used as the template in PCR assays. The primers used for amplification and sequencing (its and pap31 genes) have been evaluated previously in our laboratory (Table 1) (48). For amplification of the Bartonella pap31 gene, a seminested PCR using three primers was applied. In each case, the PCR was carried out with PTC-200 automated thermocyclers and by using a Taq polymerase kit (Gibco-BRL, Cergy Pontoise, France). PCR amplification was performed under the following conditions: initial 3 min of denaturation at 94°C, followed by 44 cycles of denaturation for 30 s at 94°C, annealing for 30 s at 58°C for both genes, and extension for 45 s at 72°C. The PCR products were separated by electrophoresis on 1.5% agarose gels, visualized by staining with ethidium bromide, and then purified with a QIAquick PCR purification kit (Qiagen). PCR products were sequenced with a d-Rhodamine terminator cycle sequencing reading kit (Perkin-Elmer, Coignieres, France). Sequencing products were resolved with an ABI377 or ABI310 automated sequencer (Perkin-Elmer). Sequences obtained were compared with those in the GenBank DNA database by using the BLAST program (version 2.0; National Center for Biotechnology Information [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov])
For immunofluorescence detection (IFD), thin smears of all lymph
nodes were made before PCR sampling. The IFD test was performed
on fresh lymph node specimens. The slides were air dried, fixed
with methanol for 10 min at room temperature, and stained for
30 min at 37°C with a mouse MAb specific for
B. henselae (H2A10; titer of 1/3,200 diluted at 1/800 in phosphate-buffered
saline [PBS]) (
41). Slides were washed first in PBS (pH 7.2)
with Tween and then in PBS (10 min each) and then rinsed with
distilled water (5 min). After being air dried, slides were
incubated with a fluorescein-isothiocyanate anti-mouse conjugate
(Immunotech, Marseille, France) diluted 1:100 in PBS containing
0.2% Evans blue (Biomerieux, Marcy l'Etoile, France) for 30
min. The slides were washed as described above, air dried, mounted
with Fluoprep (Biomerieux), and then examined with an epifluorescence
microscope (Axioskop 20; Carl Zeiss, Göttingen, Germany)
at a
x400 magnification. For each lymph node, a negative control
was performed with a mouse MAb directed against
Tropheryma whipplei (
28). A positive control (smear from a
B. henselae PCR-positive
lymph node) was used in each experiment. A positive smear was
defined as the presence of specific bacterial fluorescence on
the slide stained with the MAb directed against
B. henselae and an absence of fluorescence on the smear from the same lymph
node stained with the control MAb. All smears were examined
in two different experiments to confirm the results and to determine
interoperator variability. Slides were viewed carefully since
bacteria could be seen only in separate foci, and thus the entire
smear was read.
Microbiologic cultures of lymph nodes for Bartonella isolation were performed either on blood agar plates that were incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2, examined weekly, and held for 2 months or by using a shell vial assay with human erythroid leukemia cells at 37°C with 5% CO2 as previously described (27). When other bacteria or mycobacteria were isolated, they were identified by Gram stain and biochemical reactions using standard bacteriologic methods. Histologic examination of lymph nodes was performed for all samples. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue samples were cut and stained using routine methods, including Gram staining, hematoxylin and eosin, and periodic acid Schiff and Warthin-Starry.
Statistics.
For data comparison, the Student t test was performed using Epi Info software.

RESULTS
Overall, we used PCR to test 200 lymph node samples (from 189
patients) sent to our laboratory with a suspicion of CSD. The
majority of the patients in this study were immunocompetent.
Among these, amplicons were obtained for the two target genes
in 54 lymph nodes of 52 patients (27.5%) with clinical and epidemiological
evidence of
B. henselae infection (CSD group). The sequences
derived from these PCR products were 100% identical to those
of
B. henselae for both genes. In our study, one of these patients
was coinfected with an atypical mycobacterium. Histologic examination
of lymph nodes showed a granulomatous and necrotizing lymphadenitis
with characteristic stellate microabscesses surrounded by palisading
histiocytes. Of the remaining 137 patients (accounting for 146
lymph node samples), 55 (29%) had lymphadenopathy due to other
infectious agents, 17 had malignant tumors (9%), 3 had sarcoidosis,
and 62 had lymphadenopathy of unknown cause (Table
2). The mean
age ± standard deviation of the 52 patients with proven
B. henselae lymphadenopathy was 23.4 ± 17.8 years (range,
1 to 56 years) versus 37.8 ± 22.9 years (range, 1 to
78 years) for those in the non-CSD group (
n = 137). This difference
was statistically significant (
P < 0.05, the Student
t test).
The sex ratio (male to female) was 1.28 for the CSD group versus
1.64 for the non-CSD group. For the 52 patients with CSD, all
noted contact with cats, 34 (65.4%) reported scratches or bites,
and 30 (57.7%) had a temperature of >38.5°C. One patient
was bitten by a mouse. The localization of the lymph node was
noted in 37 patients, with the following results: 16 (40.5%)
axillary, 12 (32.4%) inguinal, 2 groin, 4 arm, and 3 cervical
or jugulocarotid. For the non-CSD group, the localization of
the lymph node was noted in 102 patients, with the following
results: 21 (20.6%) axillary, 26 (25.5%) cervical, 15 (14.7%)
inguinal, 8 (7.8%) mediastinal, and 32 of various sites. No
lymph nodes grew
Bartonella henselae after 3 months of culture.
Serum samples were available for 38 of 52 (73.1%) patients in
the CSD group and for 58 of 137 (42.3%) patients in the non-CSD
group. The sensitivity of the IFA test using a cutoff titer
of ≥64 for the detection of anti-
B. henselae IgG antibodies
was 86.8%, and the specificity was 74.1%. For a cutoff titer
of ≥128, the sensitivity was 60.5% and the specificity reached
86.2%. A final diagnosis for the 15 non-CSD patients who had
positive CSD serology (titer of ≥1:64) was established in
seven cases, including two cases of mycobacterial infection,
one of lymphoma, one of sarcoidosis, one of Kaposi's sarcoma,
and two of
Staphylococcus aureus infection. In one case,
Propionibacterium acnes was obtained from the lymph node and could be considered
as a contaminant.
The 200 lymph nodes were tested on smears by IFD test. For the IFD assay, smears were viewed totally at a x400 magnification and each smear was viewed for 10 min by two different operators. Among the 54 B. henselae PCR-positive lymph nodes, 43 were also positive by IFD (Fig. 1) and 11 were negative. For the 43 lymph nodes positive by IFD test, 13 were treated with antibiotics and 30 were not, whereas 3 of the 11 samples negative by IFD test were treated and 8 were not treated (P > 0.05, the Student t test). Among the 146 PCR-negative lymph nodes, 135 were IFD negative and 11 were IFD positive. Overall, the sensitivity was 79.6% and the specificity was 92.5%, with a positive predictive value of 79.6% and a negative predictive value of 92.5%.
A final diagnosis for the 11 patients in the non-CSD group with
IFD-positive smears was identified in seven cases, including
two cases of mycobacterial infection, one of lymphoma, one of
cancer, and three of
Staphylococcus aureus infection. These
false-positive results were obtained with samples different
from those that produced false-positive results with the IFA
serological test. Moreover, for the 11 patients with a negative
immunofluorescence smear but who were positive by PCR, serology
was available for 10 and was positive for 9 patients when the
IFA cutoff titer was ≥64. Sensitivity and specificity could
be improved with the coupling of tests as follows: sensitivity
was 97.4% with a positive IFA (cutoff titer, ≥64) or a positive
IFD, whereas specificity was 100% with a negative IFA (cutoff
titer, ≥128) and negative IFD (Fig.
2).

DISCUSSION
CSD is usually suspected clinically, and it is confirmed by
the detection of
Bartonella DNA in lymph nodes. The infection
is usually a self-limited disease, with frequent development
of extensive regional lymph node enlargement lasting typically
2 to 3 months and occasionally longer. Surgical extirpation
or lymph node aspiration is rarely needed. However, in cases
of atypical presentation, lymph node biopsy is often performed
to rule out more severe diseases such as malignant disease or
mycobacterial infection. The isolation of
B. henselae from lymph
nodes of patients suffering from CSD has rarely been reported,
since the bacteria are very fastidious (
3,
6,
27). Thus, there
is a need for suitable alternative tests or combinations of
different tests to improve the diagnosis of
B. henselae infections.
Serological analysis by immunofluorescence or enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay is a useful noninvasive diagnostic method
for the diagnosis of CSD, but specificities and sensitivities
may vary according to the antigens used and disease case definition
(
5,
11,
32). To avoid this problem in the present study, all
B. henselae cases were unambiguously diagnosed by PCR amplification
of
B. henselae from a lymph node biopsy sample by using two
different target genes as previously reported (
48). This study
evaluated a new direct method for diagnosing CSD, i.e., an IFD
assay using a MAb directed against
B. henselae. This MAb (H2A10)
was of the IgG2a subclass, reacted with a 43-kDa epitope present
only in
B. henselae strains, and did not cross-react with other
Bartonella species (
41). This MAb has been successfully used
to specifically demonstrate the presence of
B. henselae in erythrocytes
from bacteremic cats (
41). Moreover, we also evaluated a commercial
IFA test to compare the two methods and to propose a strategy
for the diagnosis of CSD.
We found in this study that about 28% of patients suspected of having CSD were found to have proven CSD (clinical and PCR-based detection). This proportion is very close to the result of a previous report which found that 39% of 274 patients with lymphadenopathy had CSD confirmed by PCR (48). B. henselae has been described as the main agent of CSD, but B. quintana and B. clarridgeiae have also been proposed as possible agents of the disease (13, 26, 29; D. Raoult, M. Drancourt, A. Carta, and J. A. Gastaut, Letter, Lancet 343:977, 1994). B. clarridgeaie and B. quintana were not been amplified from the lymph nodes in this study or in a previous study by our group (48). The only differences found in the patients' characteristics between the two groups (CSD and non-CSD) were in the mean age and sex ratio, which were both lower in the CSD group. These results are in accordance with the fact that the disease usually occurs in young patients (48). In the non-CSD group, patients were older and some of the chronic cases were due to more serious diseases such as tuberculosis or lymphoma.
The sensitivity and specificity of the serological test used in this study were similar to those previously reported (32) and confirm the results of studies showing the high sensitivity of the IFA test for the diagnosis of CSD (44, 46). We report a sensitivity of 86.8% at a cutoff titer of ≥64. However, specificity was low, since we found malignant processes and mycobacterial infections in the non-CSD group. Giladi et al. and Ridder et al. have reported four cases of patients with malignant tumors and high antibody titers against B. henselae (18, 39). The study of Sander et al. excluded patients with malignancy (43). Moreover, the seroprevalence in a particular geographic area as well as the antigen preparation of the respective IFA tests used should be determined before interpretation of the results (43). Even when two different serological tests were coupled, the specificity and the sensitivity were not sufficient for the diagnosis of CSD (32). False-negative PCR results could be due to a previous infection, with disappearance of the bacteria in the lymph nodes while antibodies against B. henselae remained present, suggesting that the results of PCR strongly depend on the duration of illness (39). Since CSD lymphadenopathy may last for months, it is indeed possible that patients with positive serology and negative PCR results had a previous infection due to B. henselae which was not acute at the time of sampling. This may also explain why isolation of the bacteria from lymph nodes is so difficult (27), because bacteria have disappeared from the node and positive serology results reflect a previous infection. If so, then the sensitivity and specificity of PCR and IFD would be less if we consider a retrospective diagnosis. However, for an acute diagnosis at the time of sampling, PCR and IFD were more predictive of the disease. For these reasons, we believe that diagnosis of B. henselae infections should not be made only by serology. Exclusion of other diagnoses, especially of more severe diseases such as lymphoma and mycobacterial infections, should be performed in atypical cases by histological analysis of lymph nodes.
Our new IFD assay was very easy to perform since we only needed lymph node smears. Interpretation of clinical samples, compared to negative and positive controls, was reproducible between operators. This method can be used in all laboratories with an epifluorescence microscope. Moreover, this method can be easily coupled with histological analysis and conventional culture to exclude more severe diseases, especially malignant processes and other bacterial infections. One of the problems with the IFD test was that fluorescence was not homogeneously distributed in the smears, as the bacteria were only found focally. Thus, all experiments were carried out twice to confirm the results. One may explain the 11 false-negative IFD tests by the focal presence of bacteria in the lymph node. Quantitative detection of Bartonella DNA would be of great interest to support this hypothesis but was not performed in this study. For the non-CSD group, this assay is 92.5% specific, but this is not enough since we have also found severe diseases such as mycobacterial infections and malignant processes in the non-CSD group. This type of result can lead to lack of treatment and serious consequences. Nevertheless, misdiagnosis for these cases was avoided by histological analysis of the lymph nodes. The three cases of S. aureus infection were also easily identified since culture of the bacteria was rapid and since this bacterium is known to cause false-positive results in immunofluorescence assays due to nonspecific reactions with protein A (14).
Interestingly, false-positive results with the IFA test and the IFD test were obtained with different samples and thus the two tests appear to be complementary. From our study, it is possible to propose a strategy for the diagnosis of CSD. To obtain a specificity and a positive predictive value of 100%, both IFA and IFD should be positive (using a cutoff titer for the serology of ≥128), whereas a sensitivity higher than 95% can be achieved when only one of the two tests is positive. These results for sensitivity and specificity should be interpreted cautiously since they are based on a small number of patients.
In conclusion, the present study shows the high specificity of the IFD using a MAb directed against B. henselae and performed with lymph node smears from CSD patients, especially when associated with histological analysis and conventional bacterial culture. The test described in this study could play an important role in the diagnosis of CSD since it requires only an epifluorescence microscope and can reduce costs and delays for diagnosis. Since PCR-based detection with biopsy samples is available only in reference laboratories, we suggest using this test coupled with the commercial serology test for the diagnosis of CSD.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank S. Dumler for reviewing the manuscript.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS UMR 6020A, Faculté de Médecine, Université de la Méditerranée, 27 Boulevard Jean Moulin, 13385 Marseille Cedex 05, France. Phone: (33) 4 91 38 55 17. Fax: (33) 4 91 83 03 90. E-mail:
Didier.Raoult{at}medecine.univ-mrs.fr.


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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, July 2003, p. 686-691, Vol. 10, No. 4
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.4.686-691.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.