Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha
Oswaldo Cruz Foundation
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha.
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2002
Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Célia Maria Ferreira Gontijo; Silvana Maria Elói-Santos; Andréa Teixeira Carvalho; Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira; Marcos José Marques; Odair Genaro; Wilson Mayrink; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho
In the current study we described initial standardization steps of a new methodology to detect anti-live Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis promastigote antibodies by flow cytometry, followed by analysis of its applicability to clinical studies. We have studied 39 individuals with positive conventional serology to leishmaniasis, classified according to the absence/presence of cutaneous lesions (L- and L+). The results were expressed as percentage of positive fluorescent parasites (PPFP). Data analysis at dilution of 1:1,024, allowed the distinction of 95% of L+ patients as a group of high reactivity (PPFP>50%) and 72% of L- individuals as a group of low reactivity (PPFP<50%). The analysis of immunofluorescence assay titers did not show any relationship with the absence/presence of lesion. Together, our data support the applicability of flow cytometry to identify cases of active infection, which has not been possible through conventional serological reactions.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2006
Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Célia Maria Ferreira Gontijo; Silvana Maria Elói-Santos; Andréa Teixeira-Carvalho; Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira; Teresa Cristina Abreu Ferrari; M. J. Marques; Wilson Mayrink; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho
objective To evaluate the clinical value of flow cytometry anti‐live promastigate antibody (FC‐ALPA), for diagnosing active cutaneous leishmaniasis.
Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2007
Elenice Moreira Lemos; Izabelle Teixeira Gomes; Sílvio Fernando Guimarães Carvalho; Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Jauber Fornaciari Pissinate; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho; Reynaldo Dietze
ABSTRACT The residual serological reactivity observed in patients cured of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) represents the major factor underlying the low efficiency of most anti-Leishmania serological approaches to assess posttherapeutic cure in VL. Herein, we have described a detuned flow cytometry-based methodology to detect anti-live (FC-ALPA-immunoglobulin G [IgG]) and anti-fixed (FC-AFPA-IgG) L. chagasi promastigote IgG, along the titration curve (1:2,000 to 1:128,000), as a tool to assess late (12 months after treatment [12 mAT]) and early (2 and 6 mAT) posttherapeutic cure of pediatric American visceral leishmaniasis. Reactivities were reported as the percentage of positive fluorescent parasite (PPFP), using a PPFP of 50% as a cutoff to segregate positive and negative results. Our data demonstrated that both FC-ALPA-IgG at 1:4,000 and FC-ALPA-IgG at 1:32,000 are useful for late cure assessment in VL, with 100% specificity and outstanding likelihood ratio indices. Cure assessment at 6 mAT also showed promising performance indices, identifying 81% and 71.4% of the treated patients with negative results. However, new interpretation parameters were necessary to monitor cure at 2 mAT. We then introduced the differential PPFP (ΔPPFP) of 25% as a new cutoff for early cure assessment at specific serum dilutions to analyze IgG reactivity by FC-ALPA-IgG and FC-AFPA-IgG. Our data demonstrated that at 2 mAT, ΔPPFP was >25% in 60% and 57.1% of treated patients, whereas at 6 mAT, a ΔPPFP of >25% was observed in 100% and 95.2% of samples assayed by FC-ALPA-IgG and FC-AFPA-IgG, respectively. Together, our findings showed the potential of both FC-ALPA-IgG and FC-AFPA-IgG regarding their applicability to detect differential serological reactivity and further contribution to posttherapeutic cure assessment in VL.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 2011
Christiane Santos Matos; Jordana Grazziela Coelho-dos-Reis; Anis Rassi; Alejandro O. Luquetti; João Carlos Pinto Dias; Silvana Maria Elói-Santos; Izabelle Teixeira Gomes; Danielle Marquete Vitelli-Avelar; Ana Paula Barbosa Wendling; Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Andréa Teixeira-Carvalho; Vanessa Peruhype-Magalhães; Mariléia Chaves Andrade; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho
One of the challenges on immunodiagnostic of Chagas disease in endemic areas has been the search for more practical and safe antigenic preparation that provides tests with higher sensitivity and specificity, with low cross-reactivity. A new approach using fixed Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes to detect IgG reactivity was investigated previously. In order to continue this investigation, this study aimed at optimizing the flow cytometry-based method to the diagnosis of Chagas disease patients after specific chemotherapy. To achieve our goal, serum samples from 93 subjects - 52 adults chronically infected by T. cruzi, and 41 uninfected controls were tested by flow cytometry. Secondly, serum samples from patients Treated Cured and Treated Uncured from Chagas disease were also tested to evaluate the potential of the method on assessing cure. After establishing the ideal serum dilution and cut off, 121 serum samples from patients with other endemic infections were tested to check cross-reactivity. The results showed that parasite staining with Evans blue dye eliminated debris, allowing trustworthy analysis of anti-fixed epimastigote IgG reactivity. The applicability of the method to diagnose Chagas disease was confirmed by the high sensitivity (98.1%) and specificity (100%) found. This method also contributed for post-therapeutic assessment of cure, identifying 94.1% of Treated Uncured and 83.3% of Treated Cured patients. Cross-reactivity was observed in a very low number (6.7%). On the whole, these data highly recommend the use of anti-fixed T. cruzi epimastigote IgG reactivity by flow cytometry to the diagnosis and cure monitoring of Chagas disease in endemic areas.
Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2012
Valéria Rêgo Alves Pereira; Luiza de Campos Reis; Marina de Assis Souza; Andresa Pereira de Oliveira; Maria Edileuza Felinto de Brito; Patrícia S. Lage; Mariléia Chaves Andrade; Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho
This study aims to investigate a flow cytometry performance-based methodology to detect anti-live (FC-ALPA-IgG) and anti-fixed (FC-AFPA-IgG) Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis promastigote IgG as a means to monitor post-therapeutic cure of patients with localized cutaneous leishmaniasis (LCL). Serum samples from 30 LCL patients infected with L. (V.) braziliensis were assayed, comparing the IgG reactivity before and after specific treatment with pentavalent antimonial. Reactivities were reported as the percentage of positive fluorescent parasites (PPFP), using a PPFP of 60% as a cut-off value. In the serum dilution of 1:1024, the positive percentage of LCL serum sample for FC-ALPA-IgG and FC-AFPA-IgG was 86% and 90%, respectively, before treatment. Analysis of ∆PPFP that represents the difference between PPFP after and before treatment appeared as a new approach to monitor post-therapeutic IgG reactivity in LCL. Our data support the perspective of using FC-ALPA and FC-AFPA as a useful serologic tool for diagnosis and for post-therapeutic follow-up of LCL patients.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 2009
Lúcia Maria Garcia; Jordana Grazziela Alves Coelho-dos-Reis; Vanessa Peruhype-Magalhães; Andréa Teixeira-Carvalho; Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Márcio Sobreira Silva Araújo; Izabelle Teixeira Gomes; Sílvio Fernando Guimarães Carvalho; Reynaldo Dietze; Elenice Moreira Lemos; Mariléia Chaves Andrade; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a systemic infection, caused by an intracellular protozoan parasite belonging to the Leishmania donovani complex. The diagnosis of VL is complex because most clinical features are shared with other commonly occurring febrile hepatosplenic diseases that can be endemic along with VL. A number of serological devices are available but still require improvement mainly due to residual post-therapeutic serology and the cross-reactivity with other Trypanosomatidae protozooses. This study intended to describe and evaluate the performance of an indirect immunofluorescence assay referred as flow cytometry anti-fixed Leishmania chagasi promastigote IgG antibodies (FC-AFPA-IgG) for serodiagnosis of VL and assessment of post-therapeutic cure. The sera reactivity is reported as the percentage of positive fluorescent parasite (PPFP) along the titration curve. The analysis of sera titration curve indicated the sera dilution 1/32,000 and the PPFP=25% as the cut-off to segregate positive and negative results. Using these parameters, the FC-AFPA-IgG displayed outstanding sensitivity and specificity for diagnosis and post-therapeutic cure assessment purposes. The inter-test reproducibility of FC-AFPA-IgG was also verified, considering two independent Analysts and validated the results obtained by FC-AFPA-IgG. Moreover, the comparison between FC-AFPA-IgG and the conventional serologic test (ELISA) showed that besides the statistically analogous results with strong positive correlation the FC-AFPA-IgG displayed higher performance indexes. Further analysis demonstrated that while cross-reactivity was observed in 8% of samples tested by ELISA, no cross-reactivity was detected by FC-AFPA-IgG. Together, the findings presented in this study showed the potential of FC-AFPA-IgG in both diagnosis and post-therapeutic cure assessment of VL.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Andréa Teixeira-Carvalho; Fernanda Magalhães Freire Campos; Stefan M. Geiger; Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Fernanda Fortes de Araújo; Danielle Marquete Vitelli-Avelar; Mariléia Chaves Andrade; Márcio Sobreira Silva Araújo; Elenice Moreira Lemos; Anna Bárbara de Freitas Carneiro Proietti; Ester C. Sabino; Rafaella Gaiotti Caldas; Carolina Renata Camargos Freitas; Ana Carolina Campi-Azevedo; Silvana Maria Elói-Santos; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho
Differential serological diagnosis of Chagas disease and leishmaniasis is difficult owing to cross-reactivity resulting from the fact that the parasites that cause these pathologies share antigenic epitopes. Even with optimized serological assays that use parasite-specific recombinant antigens, inconclusive test results continue to be a problem. Therefore, new serological tests with high sensitivity and specificity are needed. In the present work, we developed and evaluated the performance of a new flow cytometric serological method, referred to as FC-TRIPLEX Chagas/Leish IgG1, for the all-in-one classification of inconclusive tests. The method uses antigens for the detection of visceral leishmaniasis, localized cutaneous leishmaniasis, and Chagas disease and is based on an inverted detuned algorithm for analysis of anti-Trypanosomatidae IgG1 reactivity. First, parasites were label with fluorescein isothiocyanate or Alexa Fluor 647 at various concentrations. Then serum samples were serially diluted, the dilutions were incubated with suspensions of mixed labeled parasites, and flow cytometric measurements were performed to determine percentages of positive fluorescent parasites. Using the new method, we obtained correct results for 76 of 80 analyzed serum samples (95% overall performance), underscoring the outstanding performance of the method. Moreover, we found that the fluorescently labeled parasite suspensions were stable during storage at room temperature, 4°C, and –20°C for 1 year. In addition, two different lots of parasite suspensions showed equivalent antigen recognition; that is, the two lots showed equivalent categorical segregation of anti-Trypanosomatidae IgG1 reactivity at selected serum dilutions. In conclusion, we have developed a sensitive and selective method for differential diagnosis of Chagas disease, visceral leishmaniasis, and localized cutaneous leishmaniasis.
Scandinavian Journal of Immunology | 2012
P. M. Freitas-Teixeira; D. Silveira-Lemos; Rodolfo Cordeiro Giunchetti; A. Baratta-Masini; Wilson Mayrink; Vanessa Peruhype-Magalhães; Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Ana Carolina Campi-Azevedo; Andréa Teixeira-Carvalho; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho
In this study, we have analysed the phenotypic features of innate/adaptive immunity of patients with localized cutaneous leishmaniasis (LCL), categorized according to their clinical/laboratorial status, including number of lesion (L1; L2–4), days of illness duration (≤60;>60) and positivity in the Montenegro skin test (MT−;MT+). Our findings highlighted a range of phenotypic features observed in patients with LCL (↑%HLA‐DR+ neutrophils; ↑CD8+ HLA‐DR+/CD4+ HLA‐DR+ T cell ratio; ↑HLA‐DR in B lymphocytes, ↑%CD23+ neutrophils, monocytes and B cells; ↑α‐Leishmania IgG and ↑serum + ). Selective changes were observed in L1 (↑%HLA‐DR+ neutrophils, ↑CD8+ HLA‐DR+/CD4+ HLA‐DR+ T cell ratio and ↑serum + ) as compared to L2–4 (↑%CD5− B cells; ↑CD23+ B cells and ↑α‐Leishmania IgG). Whilst ≤60 presented a mixed profile of innate/adaptive immunity (↓%CD28+ neutrophils and ↑%CD4+ T cells), >60 showed a well‐known leishmanicidal events (↑CD8+ T cells; ↑serum + and ↑α‐Leishmania IgG). MT+ patients showed increased putative leishmanicidal capacity (↑%HLA‐DR+ neutrophils; ↑%CD23+ monocytes; ↑CD8+ HLA‐DR+/CD4+ HLA‐DR+ T cell ratio and ↑ serum + ). Overall, a range of immunological biomarkers illustrates the complex immunological network associated with distinct clinical/laboratorial features of LCL with applicability in clinical studies.
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2007
Jordana Grazziela Alves Coelho-dos-Reis; Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Gustavo E. A. Brito-Melo; João Gabriel Ribas; Anna Bárbara Carneiro-Proietti; Bernadete Catalan-Soares; Edel Figueiredo Barbosa-Stancioli; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho
This study evaluated the performance of single and combined laboratory parameters, B-lymphocyte percentages (%LB), T/B cell ratio and %CD8+HLA-DR+/CD8+, to differentiate asymptomatic cases (AS) from HAM/TSP patients (HT) within a population of HTLV-1 seropositive cases. Percentage indices demonstrated that each parameter alone presented moderate performance, with co-negativity of 83 and 91% for %LB and T/B cell ratio, respectively, and co-positivity of 78% for %CD8+HLA-DR+/CD8+. Combined analysis (%CD8+HLA-DR+/CD8+ and T/B cell ratio) did not show any substantial performance enhancement (co-positivity = 75% and co-negativity = 74%). Likelihood ratio analysis using different value ranges for the separate parameters revealed that HTLV-1 seropositive cases with %LB 11 and %CD8+HLA-DR+/CD8+>70% would have, respectively, 11, 19 and 10 times greater chance of belonging to the HT group. Therefore, use of these phenotypic indicators as complementary laboratory methods for monitoring the clinical progression of chronic HTLV-1 infection is recommended.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 2010
Izabelle Teixeira Gomes; Sílvio Fernando Guimarães Carvalho; Roberta Dias Rodrigues Rocha; Vanessa Peruhype-Magalhães; Reynaldo Dietze; Olindo Assis Martins-Filho; Elenice Moreira Lemos
We have previously reported a novel flow cytometric based methodology to access the reactivity of seric anti-live (FC-ALPA) and fixed (FC-AFPA) L. chagasi IgG antibodies applicable for cure assessment after specific therapy of VL. Both, FC-ALPA-IgG and FC-AFPA-IgG are promising targets to be used for early cure assessment. However, our finding suggested that further refinements were still required to improve the performance of FC-AFPA IgG for early cure assessment in VL. In the present investigation, we have established and evaluated the performance of FC-AFPA-IgG1/IgG2/IgG3/IgG4 aiming to increase the performance index of the previously reported for FC-AFPA-IgG. The data was expressed as percentage of fluorescent positive parasites after incubation of pre-fixed L. chagasi promastigotes with the test sera samples and addition of second-step FITC-labeled anti-human IgG subclasses conjugates. The analysis of anti-L. chagasi IgG reactivity in polled sera samples from VL patients demonstrated that, before the etiological treatment, the IgG subclass profile was characterized by IgG1>IgG3 with the absence of IgG2 and IgG4 at the specific sera dilution tested. Following the establishment of specific PPFP cut-off-edges to segregate negative and positive results (PPFP of 50% for FC-AFPA-IgG1 and PPFP of 40% for FC-AFPA-IgG3), the analysis of IgG1 and IgG3 reactivity demonstrated good performance for early cure assessment in VL. The analysis of individual samples indicated that despite at 2 mAT, most treated VL patients (81%) still displayed positive results in FC-AFPA-IGg1 analysis, an increased fraction of treated patients (76%) presented negative in FC-AFPA-IgG1 analysis at 6 mAT. Interestingly, the data from FC-AFPA-IgG3 demonstrated an outstanding performance of this method to early cure assessment in VL with increased frequency of treated patients displaying negative results at 2 mAT (90.5%) as well as at 6 mAT (95.2%). The analysis of likelihood ratio (LR) further confirmed the remarkable performance of FC-AFPA-IgG3 as an early complementary biomarker useful to monitor the post-therapeutic cure in human VL.