February 1, 2017
Journal Article

Evaluation of PCR Systems for Field Screening of Bacillus anthracis

Abstract

There is little published data on the performance of hand-portable polymerase chain reaction (PCR) instruments that could be used by first responders to determine if a suspicious powder contains a potential biothreat agent. We evaluated five commercially available hand-portable PCR instruments for detection of Bacillus anthracis (Ba). We designed a cost-effective, statistically-based test plan that allows instruments to be evaluated at performance levels ranging from 0.85-0.95 lower confidence bound (LCB) on the probability of detection (POD) at confidence levels of 80-95%. We assessed specificity using purified genomic DNA from 13 Ba strains and 18 Bacillus near neighbors, interference with 22 common hoax powders encountered in the field, and PCR inhibition when Ba spores were spiked into these powders. Our results indicated that three of the five instruments achieved >0.95 LCB on the POD with 95% confidence at test concentrations of 2,000 genome equivalents/mL (comparable to 2,000 spores/mL), displaying more than sufficient sensitivity for screening suspicious powders. These instruments exhibited no false positive results or PCR inhibition with common hoax powders, and reliably detected Ba spores spiked into common hoax powders, though some issues with instrument controls were observed. Our testing approach enables efficient instrument performance testing to a statistically rigorous and cost-effective test plan to generate performance data that will allow users to make informed decisions regarding the purchase and use of biodetection equipment in the field.

Revised: February 15, 2017 | Published: February 1, 2017

Citation

Ozanich R.M., H.A. Colburn, K.D. Victry, R.A. Bartholomew, J.S. Arce, A. Heredia-Langner, and K.H. Jarman, et al. 2017. Evaluation of PCR Systems for Field Screening of Bacillus anthracis. Health Security 15, no. 1:70-80. PNNL-SA-115228. doi:10.1089/hs.2016.0043