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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2002, p. 324-328, Vol. 9, No. 2
1071-412X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.9.2.324-328.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS:UPRESA 6020, Faculté de Médecine, Université de la Méditerranée, 13385 Marseille Cedex 05, France,1 Department of Internal Medicine, Aker University Hospital, Oslo, Norway,2 Medical Department, Kaiser Franz Josef Hospital, Vienna, Austria,3 Department of Virology, Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control, Solna, Sweden4
Received 21 August 2001/ Returned for modification 11 October 2001/ Accepted 30 November 2001
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We describe here the antibody responses to R. africae in 48 patients with African tick-bite fever and compare these to those against R. conorii in 48 patients with Mediterranean spotted fever. In addition, we estimated the influence of early doxycycline therapy on the development of anti-R. africae antibodies.
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We did not include in our study patients in whom the diagnosis of R. africae infection was made based on the presence of levels of antibodies to R. africae that were greater than those to R. conorii by at least two dilutions since this criterion is also part of the question being investigated. A diagnosis of Mediterranean spotted fever was made in patients who had a diagnostic score of >25 as described elsewhere (8). Briefly, patients had such a score if they presented with a single IgG titer determined by MIF of
1:128 and/or an IgM titer of
1:64 and showed two of the following symptoms: fever, "tache noire," or rash. Patients also had such a score if they only had one of the signs but also seroconverted or showed a fourfold increase in antibody titers after traveling in a Mediterranean area in summer.
Patient selection. For our study we selected patients from our laboratory databank. Patients with African tick-bite fever were selected if there were acute- and convalescent-phase sera available and if the attending physician had recorded the date of onset of signs and the treatment given. Patients with Mediterranean spotted fever were selected if both acute- and convalescent-phase sera were available.
Serology.
R. conorii strain Seven (Malish, ATCC VR-613T) and R. africae strain ESF-5 (provided by G. Dasch) were grown in Vero cell monolayers in 150-cm2 tissue culture flasks. Heavily infected cells (5 days postinoculation) were harvested with sterile glass beads and pelleted by centrifugation at 10,000 rpm for 15 min. For MIF, the pellets were resuspended in sterile distilled water so that each suspension had the same density of organisms as determined optically after Gimenez staining. These antigens were applied with a drawing pen at opposing poles of each well on 30-well microscope slides (Dynatech Laboratories, Ltd., Billingshurst, United Kingdom), air dried, and fixed in acetone for 10 min. Twofold serial dilutions of the sera from 1:8 to 1:4,096 were made in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) with 3% nonfat powdered milk, applied to the antigens, and incubated in a moist chamber for 30 min at 37°C. After three 10-min washes in PBS, the slides were air dried and the reactive antibodies detected with 1:300 dilutions of fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-human IgG(
) (Fluoline G; BioMerieux, Marcy l'Etoile, France) or anti-human IgM (Fluoline M; BioMerieux) by using incubation times and washing procedures as described above. The slides were mounted in buffered glycerol (Fluoprep; BioMerieux) and read with a Zeiss fluorescence microscope at x400 magnification. Prior to IgM determination, rheumatoid factor absorbent (RF-Absorbent; Behring, Mannheim, Germany) was used to remove IgG.
The interval (in days) between the onset of clinical signs and the date of blood sampling was calculated for each patient. We regarded acute-phase sera as sera collected up to the 14th day from onset, when clinical signs were present, whereas convalescent-phase sera were sera collected after that point. Also for each patient, we calculated the median delay before IgG and IgM seroconversion to R. africae or R. conorii.
Influence of antibiotic therapy.
To determine the effects of doxycycline on the development of antibodies to R. africae when administered to patients in the early stages (
7 days of clinical signs) of African tick-bite fever, we compared treatments given to patients who did seroconvert and those who did not.
Statistical tests. Slopes of linear regression curves were compared as variances by using the Student's t test. Medians were compared by using the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test. Observed differences were considered significant when the P value was determined to be <0.05 by two-tailed tests.
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The medians of the antibody titers each week after the onset of signs are shown in Fig. 1. In acute-phase sera, the IgG and IgM titers to R. africae in the 48 patients with African tick-bite fever and positive serology ranged from <1:8 to 1:16 and from <1:8 to 1:64, respectively. The IgG and IgM titers in the patients with African tick-bite fever against R. conorii were from <1:8 to 1:16 and from <1:8 to 1:32, respectively. In convalescent-phase sera, IgG and IgM titers to R. africae ranged from 1:16 to 1:1,024 and from 1:32 to 1:512, respectively, whereas the IgG and IgM titers to R. conorii ranged from <1:8 to 1:1,024 and from <1:8 to 1:512, respectively. In the acute-phase sera of the 48 patients with Mediterranean spotted fever, IgG and IgM titers to R. conorii ranged from <1:8 to 1:64 and from <1:8 to 1:128, respectively, whereas those to R. africae ranged from <1:8 to 1:64 and from <1:8 to 1:64, respectively. In the convalescent-phase sera the IgG and IgM titers to R. conorii ranged from 1:8 to 1:1,024 and from 1:16 to 1:2,048, respectively, and those to R. africae varied from <1:8 to 1,024 and from 1:16 to 1:1,024, respectively.
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FIG. 1. (A) Comparative kinetics of IgM antibodies to R. conorii (gray) and to R. africae (gray cross-hatch) in Mediterranean spotted fever patients and to R. africae (white) and to R. conorii (black cross-hatch) in African tick-bite fever patients. The standard deviation for each median titer is shown. (B) Comparative kinetics of IgG antibodies to R. conorii (gray) and to R. africae (gray cross-hatch) in Mediterranean spotted fever patients and to R. africae (white) and to R. conorii (black cross-hatch) in African tick-bite fever patients. The standard deviation for each median titer is shown.
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FIG. 2. (A) Cumulative percentage of IgM seroconversion against R. conorii (gray curve) and R. africae (black curve) in patients with African tick-bite fever. (B) Cumulative percentage of IgG seroconversion against R. conorii (gray curve) and R. africae (black curve) in patients with African tick-bite fever.
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Although the kinetics of antibody responses in patients with Mediterranean spotted fever have been described (D. Raoult, S. Rousseau, B. Toga, H. Chaudet, J. Tamalet, and P. de Micco, Letter, Acta Virol. 29:516-518, 1985), there is little such data on patients with African tick-bite fever. In 17 of the 65 patients with African tick-bite fever that we studied, both the acute-phase and the convalescent-phase sera were negative for antibodies reactive with R. africae by MIF. Fourteen of these seronegative patients had received doxycycline in the first week of clinical disease and, as for the other spotted fever group rickettsiae, R. africae is highly sensitive to the drug (9). We suspect, then, that the elimination of viable R. africae from the body early in the course of African tick-bite fever prevents the development of detectable titers of reactive antibodies.
The kinetics of IgG and IgM responses to R. conorii we observed in patients with Mediterranean spotted fever were similar to those described previously (1). When we compared these responses to those mounted against R. africae, we found that seroconversion was significantly delayed in patients with African tick-bite fever by a median of 6 days for IgG (range of 3 to 7 weeks versus 1 to 5 weeks) (P < 10-2) and 9 days for IgM (range of 2 to 7 weeks versus 1 to 5 weeks) (P < 10-2). This delay in immune response was not due to the administration of doxycycline in early stage of the disease. A limitation of the MIF test is that it is subjective, and thus different readers of slides may report different end titers. To avoid variations in the determination of antibody titers to R. conorii and R. africae in our study, both antigens were applied at the same density to opposite poles of each well of our MIF slides so that titers could be read simultaneously. Moreover, all antibody titers were determined by only one person. With these precautions we observed that, while graphs of the antibody responses in both diseases were very similar, the antibody responses in African tick-bite fever patients were delayed significantly compared to those in Mediterranean spotted fever patients. Additionally, serological cross-reactions are common among members of the spotted fever group rickettsiae (3), but in 46% of patients with African tick-bite fever and in 52% of patients with Mediterranean spotted fever we found fourfold-higher titers against the rickettsia causing the disease. This was especially apparent with sera collected later in the course of the disease. Usually, for the serological diagnosis of rickettsioses it is recommended that a serum sample be collected early in the disease and a second sample be obtained 2 weeks later (1). Our study shows, however, that in patients with African tick-bite fever this delay between the two specimens may be insufficient to enable rising antibody titers or seroconversion to be detected. Instead, we believe that the second sample should be collected after at least 4 weeks. However, a limitation of this late serology is that all patients may not be willing to provide a late-phase serum sample, especially because African tick-bite fever is a benign disease. Moreover, since Mediterranean spotted fever may be contracted in areas where African spotted fever is present, serology may not be able to distinguish between the two diseases, especially in patients with nonspecific symptoms. Determining the reasons for the delayed antibody response requires further investigation, but it may result from differences in virulence between the causative agents. Indeed, R. africae causes a far milder disease than that caused by R. conorii (7), and the considerable variation in the severity of rickettsioses has been linked to the relative virulence of the infecting species (5).
In conclusion, our study has shown that seroconversion with both IgG and IgM may not occur when doxycycline is given to patients with African tick-bite fever early in the course of the disease. Where seroconversion does occur, it is significantly later in African tick-bite fever patients than in Mediterranean spotted fever patients. Specific antibodies to R. africae develop in the sera of patients in the later stages of African tick-bite fever, and these may aid in the definitive diagnosis of R. africae infections.
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