학술논문

An assessment of the reproducibility of reverse transcription digital PCR quantification of HIV-1.
Document Type
Article
Source
Methods. May2022, Vol. 201, p34-40. 7p.
Subject
*VIRAL load
*NUCLEIC acid isolation methods
*REVERSE transcriptase
Language
ISSN
1046-2023
Abstract
[Display omitted] • RT-dPCR capable of reproducible quantification of HIV-1 RNA without calibration. • Viral RNA extraction kits evaluated to measuring viral RNA from whole virus. • Calibration independent procedure used to participate in quality assessment scheme. • Findings demonstrating RT-dPCR could act as a reference measurement procedure. • Potential role to support routine calibration of HIV-1 RNA measurement highlighted. Viral load monitoring in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection is often performed using reverse transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) to observe response to treatment and identify the development of resistance. Traceability is achieved using a calibration hierarchy traceable to the International Unit (IU). IU values are determined using consensus agreement derived from estimations by different laboratories. Such a consensus approach is necessary due to the fact that there are currently no reference measurement procedures available that can independently assign a reference value to viral reference materials for molecular in vitro diagnostic tests. Digital PCR (dPCR) is a technique that has the potential to be used for this purpose. In this paper, we investigate the ability of reverse transcriptase dPCR (RT-dPCR) to quantify HIV-1 genomic RNA without calibration. Criteria investigated included the performance of HIV-1 RNA extraction steps, choice of reverse transcription approach and selection of target gene with assays performed in both single and duplex format. We developed a protocol which was subsequently applied by two independent laboratories as part of an external quality assurance (EQA) scheme for HIV-1 genome detection. Our findings suggest that RT-dPCR could be used as reference measurement procedure to aid the value assignment of HIV-1 reference materials to support routine calibration of HIV-1 viral load testing by RT-qPCR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]