Role of Toxoplasma gondii IgG avidity testing in discriminating between acute and chronic toxoplasmosis in pregnancy.

2020 
Risk of mother-to-child transmission of Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii) during pregnancy is much greater in women who are exposed to primary T. gondii infection (toxoplasmosis) after conception compared to those who exposed to the infection before conception. Therefore, laboratory tests that help classify recent primary toxoplasmosis are important tools for the management of pregnant women suspected to T. gondii exposure. Detection of Toxoplasma IgM (Toxo IgM) is a sensitive indicator of primary toxoplasmosis, but the indicator specificity is low because sometimes natural IgM antibodies react with Toxoplasma antigens in absence of the infection. Furthermore, Toxo IgM sometimes persists in blood serum for several months or years following the primary infection. In recent decades, Toxo IgG avidity assay has been used as a standard diagnostic technique for a better estimation of the infection acquisition time and identification of the primary T. gondii infection during pregnancy. Avidity is described as the aggregate strength; by which, a mixture of polyclonal IgG molecules react with multiple epitopes of the proteins. This parameter matures gradually within six months of the primary infection. A high Toxo IgG avidity index allows a recent infection (less than four months) to be excluded, whereas a low Toxo IgG avidity index indicates a probable recent infection with no exclusions of the older infections. The current mini review is based on various aspects of T. gondii IgG avidity testing, including a) description of avidity and basic methods used in primary studies on T. gondii IgG avidity and primary infections; b) importance of IgG avidity test in pregnancy; c) result summary of the major studies on use of T. gondii IgG avidity assay in pregnancy; d) brief explanation of the T. gondii IgG avidity values in newborns; e) result summary of the major studies on T. gondii IgG avidity and polymerase chain reaction (PCR); f) discussion of commercially available T. gondii IgG avidity assays, including newer automated assays; and g) current issues and controversies in diagnosis of primary T. gondii infections in pregnancy.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    72
    References
    9
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []