A comparison of the Genie and western blot assays in confirmatory testing for HIV-1 antibody

J Med Microbiol. 1996 Mar;44(3):223-5. doi: 10.1099/00222615-44-3-223.

Abstract

The Genie HIV-1/2 kit (Sanofi Diagnostics Pasteur, Montreal, Quebec), a synthetic-peptide solid-phase enzyme immunoassay, was evaluated as a confirmatory assay for HIV-1 antibodies in comparison with Western blot (BioRad, Hercules, CA, USA) on 50 stored HIV-1 antibody-positive sera and the 137 sera yielding repeated positive results in the conventional EIA screen out of 13405 fresh patient sera from Saskatchewan in 1993. The stored HIV-1-positive sera were uniformly positive in the Genie test. Of the 137 EIA screen-positive sera, 33 were uniformly positive and 64 were uniformly negative in Genie and Western blot; 36 were Genie-negative and indeterminate by Western blot; and four were Genie indeterminate, of which one was negative and three were indeterminate by Western blot. All HIV-1 Western blot-indeterminate and Genie-interdeterminate sera were negative in radio-immunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) and Western blot for HIV-1 and HIV-2 antibodies performed by a reference laboratory. Genie gave an accurate definitive result for 97% of EIA positive sera compared with 71% for Western blot. There was excellent correlation between Genie, Western blot and RIPA results. However, the Genie assay was faster, less costly and yielded fewer indeterminate results than Western blot in confirmatory testing for HIV-1 antibodies.

Publication types

  • Clinical Trial
  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Blotting, Western
  • HIV Antibodies / blood*
  • HIV Infections / diagnosis*
  • HIV Infections / epidemiology
  • HIV-1
  • HIV-2
  • Humans
  • Immunoenzyme Techniques*
  • Reagent Kits, Diagnostic*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Saskatchewan / epidemiology

Substances

  • HIV Antibodies
  • Reagent Kits, Diagnostic