Anti‐JC virus antibodies: Implications for PML Risk Stratification

Leonid Gorelik(Biogen (United States)), Michaela Lerner(Biogen (United States)), Sarah A. Bixler(Biogen (United States)), Mary Crossman(Biogen (United States)), Brian Schlain(Biogen (United States)), Kenneth J. Simon(Biogen (United States)), Amy Pace(Biogen (United States)), Anne E. Cheung(Biogen (United States)), Ling Ling Chen(Biogen (United States)), Melissa Berman(Biogen (United States)), Fairuz Zein(Biogen (United States)), Ewa Wilson(Biogen (United States)), Ted Yednock, Alfred Sandrock(Biogen (United States)), Susan Goelz(Biogen (United States)), Meena Subramanyam(Biogen (United States))
Annals of Neurology
August 24, 2010
Cited by 430

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A study was undertaken to establish an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect JC virus (JCV)-specific antibodies in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, and to evaluate its potential utility for identifying patients at higher or lower risk (ie, risk stratification) of developing progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). METHODS: A 2-step assay for detecting and confirming the presence of anti-JCV antibodies in human serum and plasma was developed and demonstrated to be both sensitive and specific. ELISA cutpoints were statistically established using sera from >800 MS patients from natalizumab clinical studies. Subsequently, this assay was used to determine the presence of anti-JCV antibodies in natalizumab-treated PML patients where serum samples were collected 16-180 months prior to the diagnosis of PML. RESULTS: In our evaluation of natalizumab-treated MS patients, 53.6% tested positive for anti-JCV antibodies, with a 95% confidence interval of 49.9 to 57.3%. The false-negative rate of the ELISA was calculated to be approximately 2.5%, with an upper 1-sided confidence limit of 4.4%. Notably, we observed anti-JCV antibodies in all 17 available pre-PML sera samples, which was significantly different from the 53.6% seropositivity observed in the overall MS study population (p < 0.0001). INTERPRETATION: This 2-step assay provides a means to classify MS patients as having detectable or not detectable levels of anti-JCV antibodies. The finding that all 17 of the pre-PML samples that were available tested seropositive, and none tested seronegative, warrants further research on the clinical utility of the anti-JCV antibody assay as a potential tool for stratifying MS patients for higher or lower risk of developing PML.


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