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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, March 2006, p. 356-360, Vol. 13, No. 3
1071-412X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.13.3.356-360.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, Rixensart, Belgium,1 Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom2
Received 29 September 2005/ Returned for modification 9 November 2005/ Accepted 18 January 2006
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Comparison of antibody concentrations determined by an alternative method and the reference method may result in defining a new threshold concentration (12). Before adopting an alternative assay, it is important to assess whether the analytical accuracy of the novel procedure is at least equivalent to the standard assay. Two WHO reference laboratories, located at the Institute of Child Health (ICH; London, United Kingdom) and the Department of Pathology at the University of Birmingham (Birmingham, Alabama), have been established to guide assay development and assist other laboratories in standardizing their own ELISA method and to ensure that the serological data obtained with alternative assays are comparable. The pneumococcal ELISA protocol used by these reference laboratories shows excellent correlation with the assay employed during the three clinical efficacy trials. This protocol encompasses the inhibition with cell wall PS (CPS) to reduce the detection of non-capsular-PS-specific antibodies (9).
It has recently been shown that competitive inhibition of antibody binding by a heterologous PS (22F) increases the ratio of functional to nonfunctional antibodies with reference to opsonophagocytic activity (2). The mechanism for this increased ratio relates to the adsorption of nonfunctional antibodies such as those directed against common protein and nonprotective PS epitopes. Following the recommendation of the WHO in 2000 (WHO Workshop, Geneva, Switzerland), a 22F inhibition ELISA was applied in the present study, aiming to increase the serotype specificity of pneumococcal anti-PS measurement. The specificity of the 22F inhibition ELISA method was evaluated with various serum samples by using inhibition with various heterologous PSs. The new assay was compared with the reference non-22F ELISA (9) employed at the WHO reference laboratory at the ICH and indeed demonstrated increased specificity at anti-PS levels of <1 µg/ml, resulting in a new aggregate threshold antibody concentration.
(The results of this comparative study were presented in part at the 4th International Symposium on Pneumococci and Pneumococcal Diseases in Helsinki, Finland, May 2004.)
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Serum samples B. A second 22F-non-22F ELISA comparison was performed in order to evaluate differences between pre- and post-primary immunization serum samples for which serotype 6B is shown as an example. The tests were performed with 75 preimmunization and 79 postimmunization sera from Belgian infants immunized at 2, 3, and 4 months of age with the same 11-valent vaccine or the licensed seven-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (serotypes 4, 6B, 9V, 14, 18C, 19F, and 23F) coadministered with Infanrix Hexa.
Serum samples C. The effect of the 22F inhibition ELISA on the apparent antibody level was evaluated by using pediatric serum samples from the German study described above, including seven control sera from infants immunized with Infanrix Hexa alone, and the 20 postconjugate sera as already described. The sera were tested at the WHO reference laboratory by using both the original non-22F ELISA (9) and the 22F inhibition ELISA.
Serum samples D. The specificity of the non-22F and 22F inhibition ELISAs was assessed with pediatric and adult serum samples from a variety of different studies, obtained pre- or post-pneumococcal conjugate and PS immunizations. The PS4 ELISA was taken as an example, with anti-PS4 serum concentrations ranging from 0.5 to 4.25 µg/ml. The details of the studies are not relevant because each sample was analyzed with and without 22F as a paired comparison.
Non-22F ELISA. The non-22F pneumococcal ELISA employed was equivalent to the standard protocol applied by Wyeth Lederle Vaccines (Pearl River, NY) during the three efficacy trials establishing the aggregate threshold of 0.35 µg/ml. The WHO reference laboratory for pneumococcal antibody assays at the ICH in-transferred the Wyeth assay in and demonstrated excellent agreement (data not shown). Briefly, serotype-specific pneumococcal PSs (American Type Culture Collection [ATCC], Manassas, Va.) were adsorbed onto medium-binding plates (Greiner, Gloucester, United Kingdom) at 37°C for 5 h. Serum samples were diluted with PBST (phosphate-buffered saline-Tween) containing 10 µg/ml of cell wall PS (Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark) and incubated for 30 min at room temperature. The standard serum 89-SF (courtesy of Carl Frasch, Food and Drug Administration) was incubated with 10 µg/ml of CPS-PBST. Sera were serially diluted and added to the coated and washed plates, which were incubated for 2 h at room temperature. After a further washing step, an alkaline phosphatase-labeled goat anti-human IgG (Biosource, Camarillo, CA) was added and the mixture was incubated for 2 h at room temperature and developed with p-nitrophenyl phosphate substrate in diethanolamine buffer. Plates were read at 405 nm with a 630-nm background filter after 2 h. Serotype-specific IgG concentrations of the samples were expressed in micrograms per milliliter on the basis of the standard 89-SF serum. The limit of quantification of the ELISA was 0.016 to 0.036 µg/ml of IgG, depending on the serotype.
22F inhibition ELISA. The two laboratories involved in this study employed two different 22F inhibition ELISAs to measure anti-PS IgG antibodies in human sera. (i) The 22F inhibition ELISA method used by the laboratory at GSK was essentially based on an assay proposed in 2001 by Concepcion and Frasch (2). Briefly, purified pneumococcal PSs (GSK) were mixed with methylated human serum albumin and adsorbed onto Nunc Maxisorp (Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) high-binding microtiter plates overnight at 4°C. The plates were blocked with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) in PBS for 1 h at room temperature with agitation. Serum samples were diluted in PBS containing 10% FBS, 10 µg/ml of CPS (Statens Serum Institut), and 2 µg/ml of pneumococcal PS of serotype 22F (ATCC) and further diluted on the microtiter plates with the same buffer. An internal reference calibrated against standard serum 89-SF using the serotype-specific IgG concentrations in 89-SF (9) was treated in the same way and included on every plate. After washing, the bound antibodies were detected by using peroxidase-conjugated anti-human IgG monoclonal antibody (Stratech Scientific Ltd., Soham, United Kingdom) diluted in 10% FBS (in PBS) and incubated for 1 h at room temperature with agitation. The color was developed by using a ready-to-use single component tetramethylbenzidine peroxidase enzyme immunoassay substrate kit (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) in the dark at room temperature. The reaction was stopped with H2SO4 at 0.18 M, and the optical density at 450 nm was read. Serotype-specific IgG concentrations (in micrograms per milliliter) in the samples were calculated by referencing optical density points within defined limits to the internal reference serum curve, which was modeled by a four-parameter logistic log equation calculated with SoftMax Pro (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA) software. The cutoff for the ELISA was 0.05 µg/ml of IgG for all serotypes, taking into account the limit of detection and the limit of quantification. When purified pneumococcal PSs from different companies (GSK and ATCC) were compared, they were both equally effective as coating antigens in ELISAs to measure specific IgG levels in human sera. (ii) An alternative 22F ELISA method was applied by the WHO reference laboratory at the ICH. The assay has been described in the Training Manual for Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assay for the Quantitation of S. pneumoniae Serotype Specific IgG (Pn PS ELISA) (http://www.vaccine.uab.edu/). It was developed based on the reference non-22F ELISA described above, with the modification that unknown samples were incubated with 5 µg/ml of 22F PS and 10 µg/ml of CPS.
Specificity of non-22F and 22F inhibition ELISAs. The specificity of the non-22F and 22F inhibition ELISAs was evaluated by paired comparison experiments performed with PSs from different serotypes. Pediatric and adult serum samples were incubated for 1 h at 37°C in the absence and in the presence of homologous PS (PS4) or heterologous PS (6B, 9V, 14, 18C, 19F, or 23F) at concentrations of PS ranging between 0.5 and 4.25 µg/ml, depending on the serotype. Inhibition was expressed as the mean ratio of antibodies measured in neutralized sera versus sera not neutralized with homologous or heterologous PS. The ratio equals 1 for no inhibition and close to 0 for full inhibition. After incubation, antibody concentrations in both neutralized and nonneutralized samples were determined by non-22F and 22F ELISAs.
Statistical methods. (i) Calculation of a new threshold antibody concentration for the 22F inhibition ELISA. IgGs to PS 4, 6B, 9V, 14, 18C, 19F, and 23F were measured in 30 samples (samples A) on two occasions with the non-22F ELISA (ICH laboratory) and on two or three occasions with the 22F ELISA (GSK laboratory). Geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) of these repeats were calculated for each PS per laboratory. To illustrate the antibody response after pneumococcal immunization, an aggregate reverse cumulative distribution curve (RCDC) was plotted for each ELISA method with the antibody concentrations of all seven PSs combined. The new antibody threshold for the 22F inhibition ELISA was determined for the same response level (percent) as the threshold of 0.35 µg/ml established with the reference non-22F ELISA.
(ii) Comparison of antibody concentrations generated by two different ELISA methods. Antibody concentrations were assayed in pediatric samples (samples A) with the non-22F ELISA (ICH laboratory) and with the 22F ELISA (GSK laboratory). The difference between concentration measurements with and without 22F was then evaluated on the basis of log10-transformed double-positive results (above the assay cutoff for both laboratories) for each PS. From the mean difference and the standard deviation, the geometric mean ratio and 95% confidence interval (CI) between results were calculated by transforming back into the original units.
(iii) Evaluation of the specificity of the ELISA method. The effect of the ELISA method on the ratio of antibodies measured in PS-neutralized sera versus nonneutralized sera (samples D) was tested by analysis of variance using the MIXED procedure of the SAS System (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC). The ratio was shown not to be affected by the treatment factor "sample type" (pediatric or adult) or "PS" (no significant interaction). Therefore, mean ratios were calculated for both the 22F and non-22F ELISAs with all samples combined.
Samples for which the interrepeat coefficient of variation was greater than 100% were eliminated from all of the statistical analyses described in the present paper (one sample for PS4 and one sample for PS19F).
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0.35 µg/ml were exhibited by 78.9% of the results obtained with the non-22F assay. In contrast, the corresponding concentration in the 22F inhibition ELISA was 0.20 µg/ml.
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FIG. 1. Aggregate RCDCs of pediatric post-conjugate pneumococcal anti-PS ELISA comparing two assays. Curves were calculated from antibodies to serotypes 4, 6B, 9V, 14, 18C, 19F, and 23F based on 22F inhibition ELISA (GSK laboratory) or non-22F ELISA (ICH laboratory). Thirty serum samples were obtained after primary immunization with pneumococcal conjugate vaccine. Concentrations of 0.35 µg/ml were exhibited by 78.9% of the observations obtained with the non-22F reference ELISA. This percentage corresponds to a threshold of 0.20 µg/ml compared to the 22F inhibition ELISA curve.
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FIG. 2. RCDCs for anti-PS6B comparing pediatric sera pre- and post-conjugate pneumococcal vaccination. Anti-PS IgG ELISA (GSK laboratory) was performed with and without neutralization with PS 22F. The tests were performed with 75 preimmunization and 79 postimmunization sera from Belgian infants immunized at 2, 3, and 4 months of age with an 11-valent or a seven-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine coadministered with a DTPa-HBV-IPV/Hib vaccine.
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TABLE 1. Comparison of 22F and non-22F ELISAsa
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TABLE 2. Effect of adsorption with 22F of serum samples from infants vaccinated with conjugate pneumococcal vaccine or control vaccinea
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FIG. 3. Inhibition experiments with homologous or heterologous PS. Serum samples from different sources were analyzed pairwise for anti-PS4 antibodies after preincubation without or with homologous PS4 and different heterologous PSs (6B, 9V, 14, 18C, 19F, and 23F). Results obtained with the 22F and non-22F ELISAs are compared and expressed for each ELISA method as the ratio of antibody concentrations measured in the absence and in the presence of inhibitory PS. NN, nonneutralized sera; NPS, sera neutralized with homologous or heterologous PS.
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The type specificity of the anti-PS IgG ELISA was assessed by studying inhibition with homologous and heterologous PSs. Human sera from various origins (adults and infants, pre- and post-pneumococcal conjugate and PS immunization) were used, and the inhibition was calculated for both the non-22F and 22F inhibition ELISAs. Inhibition caused by heterologous PS was evidenced in the non-22F rather than in the 22F assay, indicating that parts of the antibody levels in the non-22F ELISA were nonspecific for PS. The type specificity of the 22F assay was therefore improved compared to that of the non-22F ELISA, thus confirming previous findings (2).
Use of the 22F inhibition ELISA resulted in a reduction in the antibody level compared to that obtained with the non-22F ELISA. This effect was most pronounced in nonimmunized infants and adults and can be explained by the neutralization or removal of non-PS-specific antibodies by 22F PS. If not removed, these antibodies, and thus the count of antibodies in the serum, are overestimated. In infant sera, the non-PS-specific antibodies were mainly present in the preimmune samples, while post-conjugate immunization sera showed good specificity in either assay, which is in agreement with the findings from other studies (2, 3, 11). Consistently, the percentage of 22F inhibition was higher in the control group than in the group of sera obtained after pneumococcal vaccination.
Natural antibodies contribute to the non-PS-specific inhibitions observed. In infants, non-PS-specific antibodies originate from placental transfer of maternal antibodies (4). After conjugate immunization, the natural antibodies become masked by the increasing amount of PS-specific antibodies induced. An increased ratio of non-PS-specific to PS-specific antibodies accounts for the shift of the RCDC of the antibody concentration toward lower values at antibody concentrations of <1 µg/ml observed after 22F inhibition ELISA.
In summary, we showed that the serotype specificity of the 22F assay was improved compared with that of the non-22F ELISA. By removing non-PS-specific antibodies, the 22F inhibition ELISA will lead to lower (but real) anti-PS levels in the critical range of <1 µg/ml. The differences observed between the two assays, particularly in low-range pediatric antibody levels, prompted us to propose an alternative threshold of 0.20 µg/ml for the 22F-ELISA. In conjunction with the more specific ELISA, this lower threshold antibody concentration can be adopted for noninferiority analyses comparing new pneumococcal conjugate vaccines with the licensed seven-valent vaccine (12).
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