Bayesian evaluation of meat juice ELISA for detecting Salmonella in slaughtered pigs without specifying a cut‐off

Author:

Arnold Mark1ORCID,Smith Richard Piers2ORCID,Martelli Francesca3,Davies Robert3

Affiliation:

1. Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) Loughborough UK

2. Department of Epidemiological Sciences APHA Addlestone UK

3. Department of Bacteriology APHA Addlestone UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundConsumption of pork and pork products is a major source of human infection with Salmonella. Salmonella is typically subclinical in pigs, making it difficult to identify infected pigs. Therefore, effective surveillance of Salmonella in pigs critically relies on good knowledge on how well the diagnostic tests used perform. A test that has been used in several countries for Salmonella monitoring is serological testing of meat juice using an ELISA (MJ ELISA) to detect antibodies against Salmonella. This MJ ELISA data could be used to estimate infection prevalence and trends. However, as the MJ ELISA output is a sample‐to‐positive (S/P) ratio, which is a continuous outcome rather than a binary (positive/negative) result, the interpretation of this data depends upon a chosen cut‐off.AimTo apply Bayesian latent class models (BLCMs) to estimate diagnostic accuracy of the MJ ELISA test values in the absence of a gold standard without needing to apply a cut‐off.Methods and ResultsBLCMs were fitted to data from a UK abattoir survey carried out in 2006 in order to estimate the diagnostic accuracy of MJ ELISA with respect to the prevalence of active Salmonella infection. This survey consisted of a MJ ELISA applied in parallel with the bacteriological testing of caecal contents, carcass swabs and lymph nodes (n = 625). A BLCM was also fitted to the same data but with dichotomisation of the MJ ELISA results, in order to compare with the model using continuous outcomes. Estimates were obtained for sensitivity and specificity of the ELISA over a range of S/P values and for the bacteriological tests and were found to be similar between the models using continuous and dichotomous ELISA outcomes.ConclusionThe Bayesian method without specifying a cut‐off does allow prevalence to be inferred without specifying a cut‐off for the ELISA. The study results will be useful for estimating infection prevalence from serological surveillance data.

Funder

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, UK Government

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Veterinary,General Immunology and Microbiology,Epidemiology

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