Test ID CMVQN Cytomegalovirus (CMV) DNA Detection and Quantification by Real-Time PCR, Plasma
Shipping Instructions
1. Ship specimen frozen on dry ice only.
2. If shipment will be delayed for more than 24 hours, freeze plasma at -20 to -80° C (up to 84 days) until shipment on dry ice.
Specimen Required
Supplies: Sarstedt Aliquot Tube, 5 mL (T914)
Collection Container/Tube: Lavender top (EDTA)
Submission Container/Tube: Plastic vial
Specimen Volume: 1.5 mL
Collection Instructions:
1. Centrifuge blood collection tube per manufacturer's instructions (eg, centrifuge within 2 hours of collection for BD Vacutainer tubes).
2. Aliquot plasma into plastic vial.
Forms
If not ordering electronically, complete, print, and send 1 of the following forms with the specimen:
-Microbiology Test Request (T244)
-Renal Diagnostics Test Request (T830)
-General Test Request (T239)
Useful For
Detection and quantification of cytomegalovirus (CMV) viremia
Monitoring CMV disease progression and response to antiviral therapy
Method Name
Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR)
Reporting Name
CMV DNA Detect/Quant, PSpecimen Type
Plasma EDTASpecimen Minimum Volume
0.6 mL
Specimen Stability Information
Specimen Type | Temperature | Time | Special Container |
---|---|---|---|
Plasma EDTA | Frozen (preferred) | 84 days | |
Refrigerated | 6 days |
Reject Due To
Gross hemolysis | OK |
Gross lipemia | OK |
Clinical Information
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a common and major cause of opportunistic infection in organ transplant recipients, causing significant morbidity and mortality. CMV infection and disease typically occur during the first year after organ transplantation after cessation of antiviral prophylaxis. Such infection usually manifests as fever, leukopenia, hepatitis, colitis, or retinitis. Other manifestations of CMV infection in this population may be more subtle and include allograft injury and loss, increased susceptibility to infections with other organisms, and decreased patient survival (ie, indirect effects). The risk of CMV disease is highest among organ recipients who are CMV seronegative prior to transplantation and receive allografts from CMV-seropositive donors (ie, CMV D+/R- mismatch). The infection is transmitted via latent CMV present in the transplanted organ donor and the virus subsequently reactivates, causing a primary CMV infection in the recipient. CMV disease may also occur from reactivation of the virus already present within the recipients. Factors, such as the type of organ transplanted, intensity of the antirejection immunosuppressive therapy, advanced age, and presence of comorbidities in the recipient, are also associated with increased risk for CMV disease after allograft transplantation. Lung, heart, small intestine, pancreas, and kidney-pancreas transplant recipients are at greater risk for CMV infection than kidney and liver transplant recipients.
Among the various clinical laboratory diagnostic tests currently available to detect CMV infection, nucleic acid amplification tests (eg, polymerase chain reaction) are the most sensitive and specific detection methods. In addition, quantification of CMV DNA level in peripheral blood (ie, CMV viral load) is used routinely to determine when to initiate preemptive antiviral therapy, diagnose active CMV disease, and monitor response to antiviral therapy. A number of factors can affect CMV viral load results, including the specimen type (whole blood versus plasma), biologic properties of CMV, performance characteristics of the quantitative assay (eg, limit of detection, limits of quantification, linearity, and reproducibility), degree of immunosuppression, and intensity of antiviral therapy.
In general, higher CMV viral loads are associated with tissue-invasive disease, while lower levels are associated with asymptomatic infection. However, the viral load in the peripheral blood compartment may be low or undetectable in some cases of tissue-invasive disease. Since a wide degree of overlap exists in CMV viral load and disease, a rise in viral load over time is more important in predicting CMV disease than a single viral load result at a given time point. Therefore, serial monitoring (eg, weekly intervals) of organ transplant recipients with quantitative CMV PCR is recommended in such patients at risk for CMV disease. Since changes in viral load may be delayed by several days in response to antiviral therapy and immunosuppression, viral load should not be monitored more frequently than a weekly basis. Typically, CMV viral load changes of greater than 0.5 log IU/mL are considered biologically significant changes in viral replication. Patients with suppression of CMV replication (ie, viral load of <35 or <1.54 log IU/mL at days 7, 14, and 21 of treatment) had shorter times to resolution of clinical disease than those without viral suppression. No degree of relative viral load reduction from pretreatment level was associated with faster resolution of CMV disease.
Reference Values
Undetected
Interpretation
The quantification range of this assay is 35 to 10,000,000 IU/mL (1.54 log to 7.00 log IU/mL), with a 95% or higher limit of detection at 35 IU/mL.
A result of "Undetected" indicates the absence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) DNA in the plasma (see Cautions below).
A result of "<35 IU/mL (<1.54 log IU/mL)" indicates that CMV DNA is detected in the plasma, but the assay cannot accurately quantify the CMV DNA present below this level.
A quantitative value (reported in IU/mL and log IU/mL) indicates the level of CMV DNA (ie, viral load) present in the plasma.
A result of ">10,000,000 IU/mL (>7.00 log IU/mL)" indicates that CMV DNA level present in plasma is above 10,000,000 IU/mL (7.00 log IU/mL), and the assay cannot accurately quantify CMV DNA present above this level.
Cautions
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) viral load results generated with this assay may be higher (up to 1.00 log IU/mL) than those from the previous cobas AmpliPrep/cobas TaqMan CMV test (Roche Molecular Systems Inc), due to differences in the sensitivity of both assays.
Variants within the highly conserved regions of the CMV DNA polymerase (UL54) gene covered by cobas CMV may affect primers or probe binding resulting in the under quantitation of virus or failure to detect the presence of virus. The cobas CMV assay mitigates this risk by use of redundant CMV target sequence amplification primers.
Clinical Reference
1. Kotton CN, Kumar D, Caliendo AM, et al: International consensus guidelines on the management of cytomegalovirus in solid organ transplantation. Transplantation. 2010 Apr 15;89(7):779-795
2. Kraft CS, Armstrong WS, Caliendo AM: Interpreting quantitative cytomegalovirus DNA testing: understanding the laboratory perspective. Clin Infect Dis. 2012 Jun;54(12):1793-1797
3. Razonable RR, Asberg A, Rollag H, et al: Virologic suppression measured by a cytomegalovirus (CMV) DNA test calibrated to the World Health Organization international standard is predictive of CMV disease resolution in transplant recipients. Clin Infect Dis. 2013 Jun;56(11):1546-1553
Method Description
The cobas cytomegalovirus (CMV) assay is a US Food and Drug Administration-approved, in vitro nucleic acid amplification test for the quantification of CMV DNA in human EDTA-plasma using the cobas 6800 System or cobas 8800 System for fully automated viral nucleic acid extraction (generic silica-based capture technique) and automated amplification and detection of the viral nucleic acid sequence. This polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay amplifies sequences within CMV DNA polymerase (UL54) gene region and generates amplification products that are detected and quantified in real-time with 2 sequence-specific TaqMan probes. A non-CMV armored DNA quantitation standard (DNA-QS) is introduced into each specimen during sample preparation to serve as internal control for nucleic acid extraction and PCR amplification and detection processes. Fluorescent reporter dye-labeled TaqMan probes hybridized to the complementary CMV target sequences and DNA-QS sequence undergo hydrolysis during PCR amplification step to generate fluorescent signal detected in 2 different dye channels. Concentration of the CMV DNA in a patient's plasma sample is determined by a ratio of the intensity of the fluorescent dye from the cleaved CMV target sequence probes and that from the DNA-QS target probe detected throughout the PCR process.(Package insert: cobas CMV-Quantitative nucleic acid test for use on the cobas 6800/8800 Systems. Roche Molecular Systems, Inc; Rev 2.0, 12/2020)
Day(s) Performed
Monday through Saturday
Report Available
1 to 5 daysTest Classification
This test has been cleared, approved, or is exempt by the US Food and Drug Administration and is used per manufacturer's instructions. Performance characteristics were verified by Mayo Clinic in a manner consistent with CLIA requirements.CPT Code Information
87497