Christoph Steininger
Medical University of Vienna
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Featured researches published by Christoph Steininger.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2002
Christoph Steininger; Michael Kundi; Stephan W. Aberle; Judith H. Aberle; Theresia Popow-Kraupp
ABSTRACT The degrees of effectiveness of reverse transcription (RT)-PCR, virus isolation, and antigen enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of influenza A virus were evaluated with nasopharyngeal swabs from 150 patients (1 week to 86 years old) with influenza A virus infection. RT-PCR had a sensitivity for influenza A virus in stock virus preparations 103 times higher than virus isolation and 106 to 107 times higher than ELISA. The detection rate achieved by RT-PCR in clinical samples was clearly higher (93%) than that by virus isolation (80%) and ELISA (62%). Despite low overall detection rates achieved by antigen ELISA, samples from patients younger than 5 years old yielded higher-than-average rates in this rapid assay (88%). The likelihood of negative results in the ELISA increased significantly with increasing age of the patient (P < 0.01). The degrees of effectiveness of RT-PCR and virus isolation were not influenced by the age of the patient. Neither influenza immunizations nor the interval between onset of symptoms and laboratory investigation (mean, 4.7 days; standard deviation, 3.3 days) affected results obtained by the three test systems. Our results demonstrate that the ELISA is reliable for rapid laboratory diagnosis of influenza in infants and young children, but for older patients application of RT-PCR or virus isolation is necessary to avoid false negative results.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2003
Christoph Steininger; Michael Kundi; Gerlinde Jatzko; Herbert Kiss; Andreas Lischka; Heidemarie Holzmann
Virological and clinical data from 73 hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected pregnant women who gave birth to 75 children were merged retrospectively, by logistic regression analysis, to investigate risk factors for vertical transmission of HCV. Eighty-two percent of the HCV-infected mothers were HCV-RNA-positive during pregnancy, and 10% were coinfected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Nine children were HCV infected, 1 was HIV infected, but none was HIV-HCV coinfected. Among vaginal deliveries, the mean HCV load of mothers who transmitted HCV to their infants was higher than that of those who did not (8.1 x 10(5) vs. 1.4 x 10(4) copies/mL; P=.056). A reduction in umbilical cord-blood pH (relative risk, 3.9; P=.04) or the occurrence of perineal or vaginal laceration (relative risk, 6.4; P=.028) during vaginal delivery significantly increased the risk of vertical HCV transmission. In conclusion, high maternal viremia, infantile hypoxia, and intrapartum exposure to virus-contaminated maternal blood increased the risk of HCV transmission during vaginal deliveries. Consequently, cesarean section may reduce the risk of vertical HCV transmission in selected cases.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2003
Christoph Steininger; Theresia Popow-Kraupp; Hermann Laferl; Andreas Seiser; Irene Gödl; Schiva Djamshidian; Elisabeth Stöckl
Abstract Twenty-one patients aged 4–78 years with influenza A virus–associated acute encephalopathy were studied. Influenza A virus could be detected only in a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specimen obtained from 1 of 18 patients, despite the use of a highly sensitive polymerase chain reaction assay. Six patients experienced influenzal encephalopathy during the course of respiratory illness. Five of these patients had hypoprothrombinemia and 4 had increased serum creatinine levels, indicating hepatic and/or renal dysfunction. Fourteen patients experienced postinfluenzal encephalopathy ⩽3 weeks after resolution of acute respiratory symptoms. In 6 patients, focal areas of high signal intensity were visible on T2-weighted magnetic resonance images of the brain. Adenovirus DNA was detected in CSF specimens obtained from 4 (36%) of 11 patients with postinfluenzal encephalopathy. Thus, influenzal encephalopathy is frequently associated with metabolic disorders, whereas postinfluenzal encephalopathy appears to have different possible etiologies.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001
Christoph Steininger; Stephan W. Aberle; Theresia Popow-Kraupp
ABSTRACT The development of a rhinovirus (RV)-RNA-specific reverse transcription (RT)-PCR assay is complicated by the close homology between the RV and enterovirus (EV) genomes in the highly conserved 5′-noncoding region, which is chosen for primer design in most RT-PCR assays. We have developed a sensitive, rapid, and RV-specific nested RT-PCR assay and have used it to test nasopharyngeal aspirates from 556 patients presenting with acute respiratory tract infections. RV RNA was detected by nested RT-PCR not only in all of 52 samples that were RV positive by virus isolation methods but also in 124 of 367 samples that were negative by virus isolation methods and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In addition, in 23 of 137 samples that were positive for a different respiratory virus by virus isolation and/or ELISA, RV RNA was detected by RT-PCR. EVs, adenoviruses, respiratory syncytial viruses, coronaviruses, and influenza and parainfluenza viruses, including clinical isolates as well as stock viruses, were not amplified in our RV-specific RT-PCR assay, indicating that this assay was highly specific. The processing time was less than 2 days for the RT-PCR, as opposed to up to 2 weeks for virus isolation. These results indicate that nested RT-PCR is more sensitive than conventional methods for the detection of RV in patients experiencing acute respiratory tract infections and represents the only reliable tool for the early laboratory diagnosis of RV infections. This is especially important in light of new opportunities for therapy currently being developed.
Medical Microbiology and Immunology | 2005
Stephan W. Aberle; Judith H. Aberle; Christoph Steininger; Elisabeth Puchhammer-Stöckl
Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) reactivation can lead to the development of neurological disease. Diagnosis has been based on the detection of VZV DNA in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) by PCR-based methods. The aim of this study was to determine whether the VZV DNA copy number in the CSF correlates with the course of the disease and to determine its prognostic relevance. VZV DNA was quantified in CSF samples obtained from 30 patients with neurological disease due to VZV reactivation using real time PCR, and the VZV DNA copy number was correlated to the clinical and laboratory findings for each case. Viral loads ranged from 50 copies/ml to 2.6×108 copies/ml. Significantly higher viral loads [geometric mean (GM): 7.2 x 104 copies/ml] were found in patients with encephalitis compared to patients with meningitis (GM: 4.1×103 copies/ml) (P=0.01, Mann-Whitney U test). In eight patients without zoster dermal lesions no significant difference in viral load (GM: 4.6×103) was detected compared to patients exhibiting dermal lesions (GM: 2.2×104) (P=0.14). High copy numbers of VZV DNA in CSF were clearly associated with the severity of neurological disease and none of the patients with a VZV viral load below 104 copies had a disease course which required intensive care.
Blood | 2012
Christoph Steininger; George F. Widhopf; Emanuela M. Ghia; Christopher S. Morello; Katrina Vanura; Rebecca L. Sanders; Deborah H. Spector; Don Guiney; Ulrich Jäger; Thomas J. Kipps
Leukemia cells from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) express a highly restricted immunoglobulin heavy variable chain (IGHV) repertoire, suggesting that a limited set of antigens reacts with leukemic cells. Here, we evaluated the reactivity of a panel of different CLL recombinant antibodies (rAbs) encoded by the most commonly expressed IGHV genes with a panel of selected viral and bacterial pathogens. Six different CLL rAbs encoded by IGHV1-69 or IGHV3-21, but not a CLL rAb encoded by IGHV4-39 genes, reacted with a single protein of human cytomegalovirus (CMV). The CMV protein was identified as the large structural phosphoprotein pUL32. In contrast, none of the CLL rAbs bound to any other structure of CMV, adenovirus serotype 2, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, or of cells used for propagation of these microorganisms. Monoclonal antibodies or humanized rAbs of irrelevant specificity to pUL32 did not react with any of the proteins present in the different lysates. Still, rAbs encoded by a germ line IGHV1-69 51p1 allele from CMV-seropositive and -negative adults also reacted with pUL32. The observed reactivity of multiple different CLL rAbs and natural antibodies from CMV-seronegative adults with pUL32 is consistent with the properties of a superantigen.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2004
Christoph Steininger; Michael Kundi; Josef Kletzmayr; Stephan W. Aberle; Theresia Popow-Kraupp
To investigate antibody maturation and serum levels of cytomegalovirus (CMV) DNA after primary CMV infection, we studied 51 immunocompetent and 27 kidney-transplant patients. Compared with the immunocompetent patients, the transplant patients had significantly more-prolonged and -variable antibody maturation, clearly longer durations of viremia, and higher levels of CMV DNA; however, antibody maturation continued for >1 year even in immunocompetent patients. Long-term ganciclovir prophylaxis in the transplant patients was associated with either delayed immunoglobulin-G seroconversion, inhibition of antibody maturation (n=2), or immunoglobulin-class switching (n=1). In conclusion, antibody maturation continues in immunocompetent patients for a period longer than previously had been thought and is significantly delayed or even inhibited in kidney-transplant patients.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2004
Christoph Steininger; Theresia Popow-Kraupp; Andreas Seiser; Nevzat Gueler; Gerold Stanek; Elisabeth Puchhammer
BACKGROUND Because poliomyelitis has been almost completely eradicated, Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) now accounts for most cases of acute flaccid paralysis. Understanding of the role of cytomegalovirus (CMV) in the pathogenesis of GBS is still very limited. METHODS We identified 42 CMV-seropositive patients with GBS between 1998 and 2001. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum samples obtained from these patients were tested by CMV-specific polymerase chain reaction, and the glycoprotein B (gB) segment of the detected CMV genome was analyzed. Virological findings were compared with clinical characteristics and CSF laboratory values. RESULTS CMV DNA was detected in 13 (31%) of 42 CSF samples from patients with GBS but was not detected in 42 CSF samples from age-matched control subjects with acute encephalopathy. CSF samples obtained early after the onset of GBS were significantly more likely to be positive for CMV DNA (P=.048). gB1 was the most prevalent genotype detected in patients with GBS (88%), followed by gB3 (8%) and gB2 (4%). CONCLUSIONS CMV DNA was detected frequently in CSF samples from CMV-seropositive patients with GBS, especially early during the course of the disease. The clinical significance of this finding has yet to be elucidated, but early administration of antiviral therapy might prove to be beneficial for selected patients with GBS.
Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2014
F. Rieder; Christoph Steininger
Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is one of the most significant viral pathogens during pregnancy and in immunocompromised patients. Antiviral prophylactic strategies are limited by toxicities, drug-drug interactions and development of antiviral resistance. A safe and protective vaccine against CMV is highly desirable in view of the potential positive impact on CMV-associated morbidity and mortality as well as healthcare costs. Unfortunately, this demand could not be met in the past four decades although development of a CMV vaccine has been ranked at the highest priority by the US Institute of Medicine. Multiple different vaccine candidates have been developed and evaluated in phase I clinical trials and few succeeded to phase II trials. Nevertheless, two different vaccines showed recently promising results in trials that studied healthy adults and immunocompromised solid-organ and bone-marrow transplant recipients, respectively. The gB/MF59 vaccine exhibited a vaccine efficacy of 50% in healthy, postpartum females. In transplant patients, gB/MF59 and the DNA vaccine TransVax both limited the periods of viraemia and consequently the need for antiviral treatment. The success of these trials is encouraging and will probably give new impetus to the development of an effective CMV vaccine. Sterilizing immunity may not be attainable in the near future and may not be necessary for a CMV vaccine to have a significant impact on health care as discussed in the present review.
Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2009
Christoph Steininger; M. Redlberger; W. Graninger; Michael Kundi; Theresia Popow-Kraupp
Abstract Rapid and reliable diagnosis of influenza is essential for identification of contagious patients and effective patient management. Near-patient assays allow establishment of the diagnosis within minutes in young children, and this study aimed to evaluate near-patient assays in relation to the patient’s age. A total of 194 patients with laboratory-confirmed influenza A/H3N2 virus infection, diagnosed within a prospective cohort study, were included. Cryopreserved nasopharyngeal swabs collected from these patients were tested by four near-patient assays (Binax Now Influenza A&B, Quick S-Influ A/B, Influ-A&B Respi-Strip, and Actim Influenza A&B). The main outcome measure was sensitivity of the near-patient assays in relation to the age of patients. The Binax Now, Quick S-Influ, Influ-A&B Respi-Strip and Actim assays had overall sensitivities of 19%, 18%, 26%, and 40%, respectively. The estimated sensitivity for influenza A/H3N2 virus detection in nasopharyngeal swabs was 17–56% in children 1 year of age and decreased to 8–22% in patients 80 years of age (logistic regression). The sensitivity of the Influ-A&B Respi-Strip and Actim assays decreased significantly with increasing age (p 0.014 and p 0.033, respectively (logistic regression)), a trend for decrease was observed for the Binax Now assay (p 0.074 (logistic regression)), and the low sensitivity of the Quick S-Influ assay was similar in children and adults. Less than one-fourth of diagnosed influenza A/H3N2 virus infections can be identified in elderly patients using a near-patient assay. Consequently, near-patient assays are of limited value for confirming the diagnosis when influenza is clinically suspected in adults. Antiviral therapy and additional diagnostic procedures cannot be withheld on the basis of a negative near-patient assay result, particularly in adult patients.