Inhalational anthrax is a fatal infectious disease. Rapid and effective treatment is critically dependent on early and accurate diagnosis. Blood culture followed by identification and confirmation may take days to provide clinically relevant information. In contrast, immunoassay for a shed antigen, the capsular polypeptide gamma-D-polyglutamate (gDPGA), can provide rapid results at the point of care. In this study, a lateral flow immunoassay for gDPGA was evaluated in a robust nonhuman primate model of inhalational anthrax. The results showed that the time to a positive result with the rapid test using either serum or blood as a clinical specimen was similar to the time after infection when a blood culture became positive. In vitro testing showed that the test was equally sensitive with cultures of the three major clades of Bacillus anthracis. Cultures from other Bacillus spp. that are known to produce gDPGA also produced positive results. The test was negative with human sera from 200 normal subjects and 45 subjects with culture-confirmed nonanthrax bacterial or fungal sepsis. Taken together, the results showed that immunoassay for gDPGA is an effective surrogate for blood culture in a relevant cynomolgus monkey model of inhalational anthrax. The test would be a valuable aid in early diagnosis of anthrax, which is critical for rapid intervention and a positive outcome. Use of the test could facilitate triage of patients with signs and symptoms of anthrax in a mass-exposure incident and in low-resource settings where laboratory resources are not readily available.
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Gates-Hollingsworth, M. A., Kolton, C. B., Hoffmaster, A. R., Meister, G. T., Moore, A. E., Green, H. R., … Kozel, T. R. (2022). Rapid Capsular Antigen Immunoassay for Diagnosis of Inhalational Anthrax: Preclinical Studies and Evaluation in a Nonhuman Primate Model. MBio, 13(3). https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00931-22