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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, November 2003, p. 1147-1148, Vol. 10, No. 6
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.6.1147-1148.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Simplified Serological Diagnosis of Endocarditis Due to Coxiella burnetii and Bartonella
J. M. Rolain, C. Lecam, and D. Raoult*
Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS UMR 6020, Faculté de Médecine, Université de la Méditerranée, 13385 Marseille Cedex 05, France
Received 19 June 2003/
Returned for modification 6 August 2003/
Accepted 29 August 2003

ABSTRACT
We tested a single-step serological assay against
Coxiella burnetii and
Bartonella species and found a sensitivity of 100%, and
a positive predictive value of 98% for the diagnosis of blood
culture-negative endocarditis (BCNE). This assay should be considered
as a possible commercial test for the diagnosis of BCNE.

TEXT
Infective endocarditis is a serious, life-threatening disease
with highly variable clinical signs that make the condition
a diagnostic challenge. A diagnosis is readily made if blood
cultures are positive, but in 2.5 to 31% of all infective endocarditis
cases, routine blood cultures are negative (
1,
2,
8). In such
situations, alternative diagnostic approaches are necessary,
especially serology. There is only one recent report of a study
that analyzed 63 cases of blood culture-negative endocarditis
(BCNE) including the new etiologic agents (
Coxiella burnetii and
Bartonella sp.) and a modification of the Duke criteria
(
10). Nearly one-quarter of the 63 cases of BCNE described were
caused by these agents (
10). These bacteria represent the most
common etiological agents of BCNE, with about 400 cases of
C.
burnetii endocarditis and more than 100 cases of
Bartonella endocarditis reported to date (
2). These serologic tests are
included as diagnostic parameters for infective endocarditis
in the modified Duke criteria (
5,
11). An immunoglobulin G (IgG)
titer of 1:1,600 against the phase I antigen of
C.
burnetii is required for the diagnosis of Q fever endocarditis (
16),
whereas a titer of

1:800 for IgG antibodies to
either
Bartonella henselae or
B.
quintana is used for the diagnosis
of endocarditis due to
Bartonella sp. (
13). In this study, we
assessed the ability of a one-step serological assay using a
single serum dilution to diagnose BCNE due to either
C.
burnetii or
Bartonella species.
Sera from 50 patients with BCNE due to either Bartonella spp. (15 patients with B. quintana and 5 with B. henselae endocarditis) or C. burnetii (30 patients) were used in this study. Bartonella or C. burnetii endocarditis was diagnosed by positive cell culture or by PCR amplification of DNA of the organisms from valve samples (6, 14). Control patients included 40 apparently healthy blood donors, 99 patients with blood culture-positive endocarditis caused by various bacteria (Table 1), 15 patients with cat scratch disease (17), 15 patients with acute Q fever (15), and 25 patients with a serological diagnosis of a bacterial or viral disease, i.e., 5 patients with cytomegalovirus infection, 5 patients with Epstein-Barr virus infection, 5 patients with hepatitis B, 5 patients with herpes simplex virus infection, and 5 patients with human immunodeficiency virus-positive serology (12). Sera were numbered from 1 to 244 before testing, which was performed blind by a technician. The presence of rheumatoid factor was determined with a latex agglutination assay (Rapitex, RF; Dade Behring) as recommended by the manufacturer. Antigens used for the serologic assay were prepared as previously described for B. henselae Houston-1 (3, 13) or for the C. burnetii phase I Nine Mile strain (7, 16). To avoid false-negative results because sera had not been added to slide wells, we also used a positive control of Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 29213) antigen, the protein A of which is reactive with the Fc fraction of human immunoglobulins (4). The three different antigens were spotted by pen point (about 2 µl) onto each well of 20-spot slides (Dynex; Cell-Line Associates Inc., New Field, N.J.), fixed in acetone for 20 min, and used for detection of IgG antibodies by immunofluorescence assay as previously described (13, 16).
The etiologies of the 99 blood culture-positive endocarditis
cases are presented in Table
1. The sera of 11 of these 99 patients
contained rheumatoid factor, as determined by latex agglutination.
As a result of preliminary studies, we only used the phase I
antigen of
C.
burnetii in our testing and only measured IgG
against
C.
burnetii and
Bartonella sp. to avoid false positives
due to rheumatoid factor (false-positive IgM when specific IgG
antibodies are present). All of the 244 serum samples tested
were positive at a cutoff titer of 1:800 against
S.
aureus,
demonstrating that serum had been added to each slide well.
The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and
negative predictive value for the different cutoffs used are
presented in Fig.
1. At the different cutoff titers used (1:400,
1:800, and 1:1,600), all of the sera from blood donors, cat
scratch disease patients, and patients seropositive for bacterial
or viral diseases not related to
Bartonella or
Coxiella species
were negative. We found that the sensitivity was 100% and the
specificity was 99.5% at a cutoff titer of 1:800 for the detection
of
Bartonella and
C.
burnetii IgG antibodies in patients with
endocarditis. At this cutoff titer, the only false positive
was a patient suffering from acute Q fever with no evidence
of endocarditis. All of the 99 patients suffering from endocarditis
due to bacteria other than
Bartonella sp. and
C.
burnetii were
negative. At a cutoff titer of 1:400, the specificity was lower
(93.8%), with 12 false positives (eight patients with acute
Q fever and four with blood culture-positive endocarditis).
Conversely, at a cutoff titer of 1:1,600, the sensitivity was
82%, with nine false negatives (nine patients with endocarditis
due to
Bartonella sp.). Since high titers of antibodies against
either
C.
burnetii or
Bartonella sp. can discriminate between
patients with endocarditis and those with acute or benign clinical
manifestations of infection, our assay enabled us to avoid the
problem of interpretation of the results when antibody titers
are low (
12,
15). Determination of IgG levels was more reproducible
than determination of total immunoglobulin levels, which can
contain rheumatoid factor and lead to false-positive results.
For each assay, addition of
S.
aureus antigen to our test wells
enabled us to be sure that sera had been added to the wells
in the test. With a cutoff titer of 1:800, we found no cross-reactions
between
C.
burnetii and
Bartonella antigens as previously reported
(
9). We only found one false positive in a patient with acute
Q fever but no evidence of endocarditis. This result is in accordance
with the fact that some patients with acute Q fever may have
antibodies to phase I antigen greater than or equal to 1:800
(
15).
Our assay is adapted to detect specific clinical entities and
can be used in all patients suffering from endocarditis and
should be considered in the future as a possible commercial
test for the diagnosis of BCNE due to
Bartonella spp. or
C.
burnetii.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Patrick Kelly for reviewing the manuscript.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS UMR 6020, IFR48, 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, November 2003, p. 1147-1148, Vol. 10, No. 6
1071-412X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.10.6.1147-1148.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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