Getting the measure of syphilis: qPCR to better understand early infection

C Tipple, MOF Hanna, S Hill, J Daniel… - Sexually transmitted …, 2011 - sti.bmj.com
C Tipple, MOF Hanna, S Hill, J Daniel, D Goldmeier, MO McClure, GP Taylor
Sexually transmitted infections, 2011sti.bmj.com
Objectives Until recently, PCR had been used to detect but not quantify Treponema
pallidum. To understand infection kinetics of this uncultivable organism, a real-time PCR
assay was developed to quantify 47 kDa membrane lipoprotein gene DNA (tpp47). Methods
Assay specificity was determined against DNA from humans, skin organisms and sexually
transmitted pathogens. tpp47 DNA (Nichols strain) was used to construct a standard curve
for T pallidum quantification. Blood and ulcer samples were obtained from 99 patients being …
Objectives
Until recently, PCR had been used to detect but not quantify Treponema pallidum. To understand infection kinetics of this uncultivable organism, a real-time PCR assay was developed to quantify 47 kDa membrane lipoprotein gene DNA (tpp47).
Methods
Assay specificity was determined against DNA from humans, skin organisms and sexually transmitted pathogens. tpp47 DNA (Nichols strain) was used to construct a standard curve for T pallidum quantification. Blood and ulcer samples were obtained from 99 patients being investigated or screened for syphilis and tpp47 was quantified.
Results
The assay was specific, not cross-reactive with other organisms tested and sensitive, with a detection limit of a single copy of tpp47 DNA. For ulcer samples, the assay was 100% sensitive and 97.14% specific. Sensitivity fell to 34.1% for blood samples but specificity remained high (100%). tpp47 DNA was more commonly detected, and at a higher copy number, in blood of patients with secondary infection (sensitivity 57.89%) compared with primary infection. Quantity of tpp47 DNA was higher in primary infection ulcers, especially in HIV-1-positive patients, than in ulcers persisting into secondary disease.
Conclusions
Quantifying T pallidum provides insight into syphilis infection kinetics: Ulcers of primary disease in HIV-1-positive patients are perhaps more infectious and the presence and load of T pallidum bacteraemia is variable, with a peak in the secondary stage. Quantitative PCR has the potential to map T pallidum infection and to highlight the impact of HIV on syphilis.
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