In-House IgM Dot-Blot Assay for Serodiagnosis of Human Leptospirosis: Development, Standardisation, and Performance Evaluation
Roberta Morozetti Blanco, Elaine dos Santos Lima, Juliana Maira Watanabe Pinhata, Angela Pires Brandao, Eliete Caló Romero

TL;DR
A new IgM dot-blot test for diagnosing leptospirosis is developed and shown to be effective and simpler than existing methods.
Contribution
A novel IgM dot-blot assay using Leptospira biflexa antigen is developed and validated for diagnosing human leptospirosis.
Findings
The IgM dot-blot test showed 96.0% sensitivity with convalescent samples and 94.4% specificity.
The test demonstrated 100% repeatability and reproducibility.
It showed almost perfect agreement with IgM ELISA, with a Kappa index of 0.81.
Abstract
Laboratory confirmation of human leptospirosis relies on serological tests, with the microscopic agglutination test (MAT) as the reference. However, due to its complexity, there is a need for a simpler and more accessible diagnostic method. This study aimed to standardise and develop an IgM dot-blot test with a whole-cell antigen from saprophytic Leptospira biflexa serovar Patoc for diagnosing human leptospirosis. After checkerboard titration standardisation, IgM dot-blot was performed with paired serum samples from 124 MAT-confirmed leptospirosis cases and 143 serum samples from healthy and diseased individuals as the control group. Repeatability and reproducibility were also evaluated. An IgM dot-blot kit was then developed and compared to the PanbioTM Leptospira IgM ELISA using 144 serum samples from patients with suspected leptospirosis. The IgM dot-blot showed a sensitivity of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLeptospirosis research and findings
