# Design and performance of a real-time RT-PCR assay for detection of influenza C viruses

**Authors:** Bo Shu, William G. Davis, Ji Liu, Beth K. Thielen, Sarah Bistodeau, Brian Lynch, Christine M. Warnes, Jimma Liddell, Anna K. Strain, Jaime Christensen, Phili Wong, Natasha Burnett, Todd C. Davis, Marie K. Kirby

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jcv.2025.105874 · 2026-03-10

## TL;DR

This paper describes a new real-time PCR test for detecting influenza C viruses, which are underreported due to limited diagnostic tools.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is a highly sensitive and specific real-time RT-PCR assay targeting a conserved region of influenza C viruses.

## Key findings

- The assay can detect as few as five RNA copies per PCR reaction.
- The assay does not cross-react with influenza A, B, or other common respiratory viruses.
- The assay shows high sensitivity and specificity in clinical specimens.

## Abstract

Influenza C virus (ICV) usually causes a mild upper respiratory tract infection in children and those infected are frequently co-infected with other respiratory viruses. However, there have only been a few hundred documented cases of ICV infection in humans as of the end of 2024. To better understand the epidemiology and clinical impact of ICVs, we developed an influenza C real-time RT-PCR (InfC rRT-PCR) assay that targets a highly conserved region of the matrix gene segment of ICVs. The analytical sensitivity evaluation demonstrated that the InfC rRT-PCR assay was highly sensitive, as it was able to detect as few as five RNA copies per PCR reaction and had robust reactivity over a range of viral RNAs from historical and recent ICVs. The analytical specificity evaluation confirmed the assay did not cross-react with any influenza A or B viruses tested, including several animal-origin viruses, or other common non-influenza respiratory viruses. The performance evaluation on clinical specimens demonstrated the assay was highly sensitive and specific for the detection of ICVs.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infected (MESH:D007239), respiratory tract infection (MESH:D012141), ICV infection (MESH:D007251), respiratory viruses (MESH:D012131)
- **Species:** Influenza C virus (no rank) [taxon 11552], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12974223/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12974223