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NAT Standards for Clinical Virology

NAT Standards for Clinical Virology. Sally Baylis, NIBSC SoGAT XX, Warsaw 12-13 June 2007. Standardisation – Clinical Virology.

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NAT Standards for Clinical Virology

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  1. NAT Standards for Clinical Virology Sally Baylis, NIBSC SoGAT XX, Warsaw 12-13 June 2007

  2. Standardisation – Clinical Virology • NIBSC is working with the UK Clinical Virology Network (CVN) & the Health Protection Agency (HPA) to develop a standardisation programme to provide run controls for diagnostic laboratories

  3. Initial Studies • Panels of viruses have been distributed to participating laboratories to select suitable run control formulations, these have included: • Influenza A (H1N1, H3N2) • Influenza B • Herpes simplex virus (HSV-1 & HSV-2) • Cytomegalovirus • Norovirus GII

  4. Initial Studies contd. Viruses diluted into virus transport medium & distributed to the participating laboratories Participants requested to test materials using routine extraction & amplification/detection procedures Data is returned electronically to NIBSC for analysis Returned data is used to make decisions on suitable formulations for further evaluation

  5. HCVM Stock Material Used in Phase I Studies • Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), Towne strain was cultured in vitro at the West of Scotland Specialist Virology Centre, Glasgow

  6. Analysis of HCMV Results - Phase I ** Run controls as expected

  7. Results • Laboratory F failed to generate Ct values for HCMV distributed in Phase I of the study • Extensive follow up was performed to identify why this and another laboratory using the same assay had unexpected results • Analysis of reactions on agarose gels revealed that product of the expected size was being amplified

  8. Alignment of Towne Strain with TaqMan Probe • Assay targets glycoprotein gene of HCMV • Analysis of the primer sequences revealed a mismatch in the middle of the reverse primer • Analysis of sequence of probe vs Towne strain of HCMV revealed 2 mismatches: GAGCGCCATCTGTTCCTTGTCGAGCAACATACGACGCACAGGGTCTTGAC TGTCGAGCAGCATACGGCGCA

  9. Evaluation of Candidate Run Controls for Norovirus GII +

  10. Evaluation of Candidate Run Controls for Norovirus GII • Norovirus (previously known as the Norwalk-like viruses) is a common cause of gastroenteritis • Detection has traditionally relied upon EM • Two genetic clusters of NoV occur; GI and GII • Phase I of a study identified a suitable concentration of NoV GII isolate to use as a candidate run control l • Faecal norovirus (GII) sample was obtained • Sample was disrupted using glass beads in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4 containing 2% FCS, & treatment with chloroform, from which a virus stock was prepared

  11. Norovirus GII Results Phase I * One or more replicate tested negative

  12. Evaluation of Candidate Run Controls for Norovirus GII • This has been distributed to 15 laboratories for on going analysis • Standards will eventually be -marked

  13. Lab H failed to detect NoV GII Norovirus GII Phase II

  14. Future Work Clinical panels have been proposed that include: CSF HSV-1, HSV-2, HCMV, EBV, VZV enterovirus, paraenterovirus Transplant HCMV, EBV, adenovirus Genital HSV-1, HSV-2, Treponema (ulcer) Eye swabs HSV-1, HSV-2, VZV, adenovirus, Chlamydia

  15. Future Work cont. Gastroenteritis NoV, astrovirus Respiratory Influenza A (H1, H3), influenza B, parainfluenza, RSV…… Vaginal swabs HSV-1, HSV-2, N. gonorrhoea, M. genitalis, C. trachomatis Urethritis N. gonorrhoea, M. genitalis, C. trachomatis

  16. Proposal Prepare International Standards for HCMV and EBV

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