Interlaboratory assays from the fungal PCR Initiative and the Modimucor Study Group to improve qPCR detection of Mucorales DNA in serum: one more step toward standardization

Steffi Rocchi, Emeline Scherer, P. Lewis White, Audrey Guitton, Alexandre Alanio, Françoise Botterel, Marie Elisabeth Bougnoux, Maria José Buitrago, Massimo Cogliati, Marjorie Cornu, Celine Damiani, Julie Denis, Damien Dupont, Stefan Fuchs, Rebecca Gorton, Pieter Jan Haas, Ferry Hagen, Rasmus Hare, Xavier Iriart, Corné H.W. KlaassenMichaela Lackner, Martina Lengerova, Willem J.G. Melchers, Florent Morio, Philippe Poirier, Jan Springer, Stephane Valot, Birgit Willinger, Cristina Mazzi, Mario Cruciani, Rosemary Barnes, J. Peter Donnelly, Jürgen Loeffler, Laurence Millon*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to identify parameters influencing DNA extraction and PCR amplification efficiencies in an attempt to standardize Mucorales qPCR. The Fungal PCR Initiative Mucorales Laboratory Working Group distributed two panels of simulated samples to 26 laboratories: Panel A (six sera spiked with Mucorales DNA and one negative control serum) and Panel B (six Mucorales DNA extracts). Panel A underwent DNA extraction in each laboratory according to the local procedure and were sent to a central laboratory for testing using three different qPCR techniques: one in-house qPCR assay and two commercial assays (MucorGenius and Fungiplex). Panel B DNA extracts were PCR amplified in each laboratory using local procedures: nine in-house qPCR assays and two commercial kits (MucorGenius and MycoGENIE). All data were compiled and anonymously analyzed at the central laboratory. For Panel A, a total of six different automated platforms and five manual extraction methods were used. Positive rates were 64%, 70%, and 89%, for the MucorGenius, Fungiplex, and the in-house qPCR assay, respectively. Using a large volume of serum for DNA extraction provided the highest analytical sensitivity (82.5% for 1 mL compared with 62.7% for smaller volumes, P < 0.01). For Panel B, five in-house qPCR assays and two commercial kits had >78% positivity. Using larger PCR input volumes (≥7 µL) was associated with the highest sensitivity at 95.5% compared to 58.3% when lower input volumes were used (P < 0.01). Using larger sample volumes for nucleic acid extraction and DNA template volumes for PCR amplification significantly improves the performance of Mucorales qPCR when testing serum.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere01525-24
JournalJournal of Clinical Microbiology
Volume63
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2025

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