Qualification and Clinical Validation of an Immunodiagnostic Assay for Detecting 11 Additional Streptococcus pneumoniae Serotype–specific Polysaccharides in Human Urine

Author:

Kalina Warren V1,Souza Victor1,Wu Kangjian1,Giardina Peter1,McKeen Andrew2,Jiang Qin3,Tan Charles2,French Roger2,Ren Yanhua1,Belanger Kelly1,McElhiney Susan1,Unnithan Manu1,Cheng Huiming1,Mininni Terri1,Giordano-Schmidt Donna1,Gessner Bradford D4,Jansen Kathrin U1,Pride Michael W1

Affiliation:

1. Vaccine Research and Development,Pfizer Research, Pearl River, New York, USA

2. Early Clinical Development, Pfizer Research, Pearl River, New York, USA

3. Global Clinical Affairs, Pfizer, Collegeville, Pennsylvania, USA

4. Medical and Scientific Affairs, Pfizer, Collegeville, Pennsylvania, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Identifying Streptococcus pneumoniae serotypes by urinary antigen detection (UAD) assay is the most sensitive way to evaluate the epidemiology of nonbacteremic community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). We first described a UAD assay to detect the S. pneumoniae serotypes 1, 3, 4, 5, 6A, 6B, 7F, 9V, 14, 18C, 19A, 19F, and 23F, covered by the licensed 13-valent S. pneumoniae conjugate vaccine. To assess the substantial remaining pneumococcal disease burden after introduction of several pneumococcal vaccines, a UAD-2 assay was developed to detect 11 additional serotypes (2, 8, 9N, 10A, 11A, 12F, 15B, 17F, 20, 22F, and 33F) in individuals with radiographically confirmed CAP. Methods The specificity of the UAD-2 assay was achieved by capturing pneumococcal polysaccharides with serotype-specific monoclonal antibodies, using Luminex technology. Assay qualification was used to assess accuracy, precision, and sample linearity. Serotype positivity was based on cutoffs determined by nonparametric statistical evaluation of urine samples from individuals without pneumococcal disease. The sensitivity and specificity of the positivity cutoffs were assessed in a clinical validation, using urine samples obtained from a large study that measured the proportion of radiographically confirmed CAP caused by S. pneumoniae serotypes in hospitalized US adults. Results The UAD-2 assay was shown to be specific and reproducible. Clinical validation demonstrated assay sensitivity and specificity of 92.2% and 95.9% against a reference standard of bacteremic pneumonia. In addition, the UAD-2 assay identified a S. pneumoniae serotype in 3.72% of nonbacteremic CAP cases obtained from hospitalized US adults. When combined with bacteremic CAP cases, the proportion of pneumonias with a UAD-2 serotype was 4.33%. Conclusions The qualified/clinically validated UAD-2 method has applicability in understanding the epidemiology of nonbacteremic S. pneumoniae CAP and for assessing the efficacy of future pneumococcal conjugate vaccines that are under development.

Funder

Pfizer

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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