Method for detecting enteric disease

6727073
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Inventors

Moore, Norman
Tarr, Phillip I.

Application #

443211

Filed

Nov-19-1999

Published

Apr-27-2004

Current US Class

435/287.8
435/30
435/7.32
435/7.37
435/7.94
436/161
436/518
436/526
436/536
436/538
436/810

International Classes

G01N 033/53

Field of Search

435/5 435/7.37 435/7.94 435/30 435/287.7 435/287.8 435/7.32 436/518 436/526 436/536 436/538 436/161 436/810

Assignee

Binax, Inc. (Portland, ME)

Examiners

Nguyen; Bao-Thuy L.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Sears; Mary Helen

US Patent References

5089391   Threshold ligand-r...
5124252   In vitro test for fecal...
5126276   Method for the deter...
5158869   Analyte determinati...
5602040   Assays
5622871   Capillary immuno...
5707818   Device and method...
5714389   Test device and met...
5795725   Methods for the ass...
5807752   Assay using an un...
5846838   Opposable-element...
5869345   Opposable-element...
5877028   Immunochromatog...
5910421   Rapid diagnostic...
6136549   systems and metho...
 

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

Hasan et al., Journal of Clinical Mircobiology. Jan. 1994. vol. 32, No. 1, pp. 249-252.* Quix .TM. Rapid E. coli 0157 Strip Test. 1997.* Re et al., Methods in Immunodiagnosis. Edited by Rose et al. 1980, pp. 147-158.* Tijssen, Practice and Theory of Enzyme Immunoassays, 1985, pp. 105-115, Elsevier, USA. Hughes et al., "Preparation of Colloidal Gold Probes", Methods in Molecular Biology, vol. 80, Humana Press, USA. Jennes et al., "Synthesis and Use of Colloidal Gold-Coupled Receptor Ligands", Methods in Enzymology, vol. 124, Academic Press, 1986, USA. Boerlin et al., "Assoications between Virulence FActors of Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli and Disease in Humans", J. of Clinical Microbiology, Mar. 1999, pp. 497-503, USA. Bokete et al., "Genetic and Phenotypic Analysis of Escheria coli with Enteropathogenic Charatcteristics Isolated from Seattle Children", J. of Infectious Diseases, 1997, vol. 175, pp. 1382-1389, USA. Schmidt et al.,"Non-O157:H7 Pathogenic Shiga Toxin-Producing Escheria coli: Phenotypic and Genetic Profiling of Virulence Traits and Evidence for Clonality", J. of Infectious Deseases, vol. 179, pp. 115-123, 1999, USA. Huicho et al., "Fecal lactoferrin, fecal leukocytes and occult blood in the diagnostic approach to childhood invasive diarrhea", Pediatric Infectious Disease J., V. 16, pp. 644-647, 1997, USA. Huicho et al., "Fecal screening tests in the approach to acute infectious diarrhea: a scientific review", Pediatric Infectious Disease J., V. 15, pp. 486-494, 1996, USA. Uchida et al., "Immunochemical Detection of Human Lactoferrin in Feces as a New Marker for Inflammatory Gastrointestinal Disorders and Colon Cancer", Clinical Biochemistry, vol. 27, pp. 259-264, 1994, USA. Gabriel et al., "Accuracy of fecal lactoferrin and other stool tests for diagnosis of invasive diarrhea at a Colombian pediatric hospital", Pediatric Infectious Disease J., V. 18, pp. 342-346, 1999, USA. Sugi et al., "Fecal Lactoferrin as a Marker for Disease Activity in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Comparison with Other Neutrophil-derived Proteins", The American J. of Gastroenterology, vol. 91, pp. 927-934, 1996, USA. Choi et al., "To Culture or Not To Culture: Fecal Lactoferrin Screening for Inflammatory Bacterial Diarrhea", J. of Clinical Microbiology, vol. 34, pp. 928-932, 1996, USA. Scerpella et al., "Evaluation of a New Latex Agglutination Test for Fecal Lactoferrin in Travelers' Diarrhea", J. of Travel Medicine vol. 1, pp. 68-71, 1994, USA. Fine, et al., "Utility of a Rapid Fecal Latex Agglutination Test Detecting the Neutrophil Protein, Lactoferrin, for Diagnosing Inflammatory Causesd of Chronic Diarrhea", American J. of Gastroenterology, vol. 93, No. 8, 1998, pp. 1300-1305. USA.

Citation

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Abstract
A method for determining and diagnosing inflammatory enteric disease using an immunochromatographic test device having a multiplicity of test zones. The method tests for the presence of at least one enteric pathogen and at least one of certain inflammatory enteric disease markers. The enteric pathogens tested for can be any number of enteric pathogens such as the pathogens E. coli O157, Campylobacter, Salmonella, Listeria, Shigella, and Yersinia. The inflammatory enteric disease markers tested for are fecal lactoferrin, a bacteria marker, a virus marker, and a protozoa marker. Positive results for any one of the pathogens indicates that pathogen as the cause of the inflammatory enteric disease. Positive results for fecal lactoferrin indicate an inflammatory condition of the intestines. Positive results for the bacteria, virus, protozoa markers indicate respectively a bacterial, viral, or protozoan cause of infection as the cause of the disease. Liquid fecal sample is mixed with a mixture containing antibodies to the pathogens and the markers. These antibodies are conjugated to a label. Each test zone on the test device has immovably fixed upon it a complementary antibody that binds specifically with one of the labeled antibodies in the mixture. Positive results appear as a stripe across the corresponding test zone.
 
Claims
We claim:

1. A method for testing a fecal liquid sample obtained from a patient suffering from diarrhea, other than a breast-fed infant, in an effort to identify the causative organism for the diarrhea and thereby enable the timely prescription of a medicament known to be effective against said causative organism or the diagnosis that the condition has no causative organism, which method comprises

(1) contacting said sample essentially simultaneously with tagged antibodies to each of (a) fecal lactoferrin and (b) at least two organisms known to be causative of diarrhea in humans selected from among the group consisting of bacteria, viruses and protozoa;

(2) contacting said sample and said tagged antibodies with a solid surface to which is immovably bound (a) a stripe of complementary antibodies to fecal lactoferrin and (b) stripes separate from the fecal lactoferrin complementary antibody stripe and from each other, of complementary antibodies to each of the organisms selected to be tested for in step (1) (b)



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to the field of immunochromatographic assays. More particularly, the present invention relates to a method for detecting enteric pathogens in fecal specimens. More particularly yet, the present invention relates to a method for detecting the presence of one or more specific enteric pathogens from the simultaneous assay for several enteric pathogens. Most particularly, the present invention relates to a method for detecting the presence or absence of several enteric pathogens and concurrently applying one or more general tests for an inflammatory condition of the intestines.

2. Description of Prior Art

Enteric pathogens can cause severe illness in people and affect a large number of people within a short period of time. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control estimates that there are five million cases of foodborne illnesses per year in the United States with up to 5,000 deaths. Campylobacter jejuni and Salmonella are the leading causes of foodborne illnesses; E. coli O157 is less frequent, but is significant in disease control because this strain of E. coli, the most noted of the enterohemorrhagic E. coli bacteria, causes the majority of severe disease from E. coli and is also a cause of large epidemics. Other strains of E. coli, such as O111, have also been implicated in foodborne outbreaks. Although the number of illnesses from E. coli O157 is low relative to the numbers of cases of Campylobacter jejuni or Salmonella, this E. coli pathogen is significant because the rate of mortality is much higher and the treatment significantly different. Some antibiotics can have a detrimental effect on patient health if the patient is suffering from an illness caused by an enterohemorrhagic E. coli that has not been diagnosed. For this reason, before prescribing antibiotics for a patient apparently suffering from an illness caused by a pathogen, it is important to determine whether E. coli bacteria is the cause in order to avoid prescribing medication detrimental to the health of the patient. Rapid determination of the cause of the illness is thus a critical factor in providing the timely and proper care of the ill. Moreover, it is critical to determine the possible sources of contamination as quickly as possible in order to take appropriate steps to eliminate them.
 
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