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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How to tell if a cat has FIV infection or just vaccination antibodies

By Levy, J K et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2008·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Differentiation of feline immunodeficiency virus vaccination, infection, or vaccination and infection in cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A study looked at how to tell if cats have been vaccinated against feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), are infected with it, or both. The researchers tested blood samples from unvaccinated cats, vaccinated cats, and those infected with FIV. They found that a new test called a discriminant ELISA was very effective at identifying FIV-infected cats, while also being able to indicate if a cat was simply vaccinated. This means that if your cat tests positive for FIV, further testing can help determine if they are infected or just vaccinated.

People also search for: cat FIV symptoms · how to test for FIV in cats · FIV vaccination vs infection in cats

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Serodiagnosis of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) is complicated by the use of a formalin-inactivated whole-virus FIV vaccine. Cats respond to immunization with antibodies indistinguishable from those produced during natural infection by currently available diagnostic tests, which are unable to distinguish cats that are vaccinated against FIV, infected with FIV, or both. HYPOTHESIS: An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) detecting antibodies against formalin-treated FIV whole virus and untreated transmembrane peptide will distinguish uninfected from infected cats, regardless of vaccination status. ANIMALS: Blood samples were evaluated from uninfected unvaccinated cats (n = 73 samples), uninfected FIV-vaccinated cats (n = 89), and FIV-infected cats (n = 102, including 3 from cats that were also vaccinated). METHODS: The true status of each sample was determined by virus isolation. Plasma samples were tested for FIV antibodies by a commercial FIV diagnostic assay and an experimental discriminant ELISA. RESULTS: All samples from uninfected cats were correctly identified by the discriminant ELISA (specificity 100%). Of the samples collected from FIV-infected cats, 99 were correctly identified as FIV-infected (sensitivity 97.1%). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: With the exception of viral isolation, the discriminant ELISA is the most reliable assay for diagnosis of FIV. A practical strategy for the diagnosis of FIV infection would be to use existing commercial FIV antibody assays as screening tests. Negative results with commercial assays are highly reliable predictors for lack of infection. Positive results can be confirmed with the discriminant ELISA. If the discriminant ELISA is negative, the cat is probably vaccinated against FIV but not infected. Positive results are likely to represent infection.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18371028/