Human Papilloma Virus Assays Evaluated for Clinical Performance

By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 19 Jan 2011
Two molecular assays for the detection of human papilloma virus (HPV) DNA were evaluated as screening tools in a clinical setting and a genotyping assay was used for confirmation.

The CLART assay uses biotinylated primers that amplify a fragment within the HPV L1 region. The Hybrid Capture 2 (HC2) test is a sandwich capture molecular hybridization assay that uses a signal amplification detection method based on chemiluminescence. Discrepancies between the tests were checked with the PapilloCheck genotyping assay, which uses a multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that amplifies a 350 bp fragment of the E1 gene of HPV.

In a study carried out at the Portuguese National Institute of Health, (Lisbon, Portugal), investigators tested 425 archived samples from women with a high risk for HPV (HR-HPV). DNA was extracted from all the samples and tested with both CLART Human Papillomavirus 2 assay (Genomica; Madrid, Spain), which detects and genotypes 35 HPV types (20 HR-HPV and 15 low-risk-HPV), in single or multiple infections and the HC2 assay (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). For results that were not in concordance, the samples were rechecked with PapilloCheck HPV genotyping system (Greiner Bio-One; Frickenhausen, Germany).

Both the CLART-13 HR-HPV and the HC2 assays showed an identical clinical performance, with a clinical sensitivity of 96%. HR-HPV positivity rates were similar by both tests CLART-13 HR-HPV: 63.1%; CLART-17 HR-HPV: 64.7%; HC2: 64.5%. The clinical specificity of CLART-13 HR-HPV was 73.6% for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 or worse, which was comparable to the HC2 clinical specificity of 71.4%.

The authors concluded that the CLART Human Papillomavirus 2 assay showed an excellent performance, very similar to that of the HC2 test, which has a defined clinically cut-off. The CLART assay was efficient, sensitive, and reproducible and has the advantage of detecting and genotyping 35 HPV types by a single test, which can provide additional information on the predictive value of infection with HR-HPV.

The study was published on December 22, 2010, in the Journal of Medical Virology.

Related Links:
Portugal National Institute of Health
Genomica
Qiagen
Greiner Bio-One



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