CD4-T cell enumeration in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients: A laboratory performance evaluation of Muse Auto CD4/CD4% system by World Health Organization prequalification of in vitro diagnostics.

Autor: Ann Ceulemans, Chaymae Bouzahzah, Irena Prat, Willy Urassa, Luc Kestens
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 1, p e0209677 (2019)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 1932-6203
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209677
Popis: BackgroundCD4 T-cell counts are still widely used to assess treatment eligibility and follow-up of HIV-infected patients. The World Health Organization (WHO) prequalification of in vitro diagnostics requested a manufacturer independent laboratory evaluation of the analytical performance at the Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) Antwerp, Belgium, of the Muse Auto CD4/CD4% system (Millipore), a new small capillary-flow cytometer dedicated to count absolute CD4-T cells and percentages in venous blood samples from HIV-infected patients.MethodsTwo hundred and fifty (250) patients were recruited from the HIV outpatient clinic at ITM. Accuracy and precision of CD4 T cell counting on fresh EDTA anticoagulated venous blood samples were assessed in the laboratory on a Muse Auto CD4/CD4% system. Extensive precision analyses were performed both on fresh blood and on normal and low stabilized whole blood controls. Accuracy ((bias) was assessed by comparing results from Muse CD4/CD4% to the reference (single-platform FACSCalibur). Clinical misclassification was measured at 500, 350, 200 and 100 cells/μL thresholds.ResultsIntra-assay precision was < 5%, and inter-assay was < 9%. CD4 T cell counts measured on Muse Auto CD4/CD4% System and on the reference instrument resulted in regression slopes of 0.97 for absolute counts and 1.03 for CD4 T cell percentages and a correlation coefficient of 0.99 for both. The average absolute bias as compared to the reference was negligible (4 cells/μL or 0.5%). The absolute average bias on CD4 T cell percentages was < 1%. Clinical misclassification at different CD4 T cell thresholds was small resulting in sensitivities and specificities equal or >90% at all thresholds except at 100 cells/μL (sensitivity = 87%). All samples could be analyzed as there was no repetitive rejection errors recorded.ConclusionsThe Muse Auto CD4/CD4% System performed very well on fresh venous blood samples and met all WHO acceptance criteria for analytical performance of CD4 technologies.
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