Diagnosis
- Anti-VCA (viral capsid antigens): most useful
- Anti-VCA IgM: appears early and disappears within 4 to 6 weeks
- Anti-VCA IgG: appears in acute phase, peaks at 2 to 4 weeks, then declines but remains positive for life
- Anti-EA (early antigen) IgG: appears in acute phase and falls to undetectable within 3 to 6 months (but may persist for years)
- Anti-EBNA (EBV nuclear antigen): negative during acute phase converts after 2 to 4 months and stays positive for life
- Monospot test: cross-reacts with many other conditions, and is often falsely negative in children
Serology in immunocompetent hosts
![Graph of serology](EBV serology.jpg)
VCa-IgM
|
VCA-IgG
|
EBNA-IgG
|
Interpretation
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
Susceptible
|
–
|
–
|
+
|
Past infection or non-specific
|
–
|
+
|
–
|
Acute or past infection
|
–
|
+
|
+
|
Past infection
|
+
|
–
|
–
|
Acute infection or non-specific
|
+
|
–
|
+
|
??
|
+
|
+
|
–
|
Acute infection
|
+
|
+
|
+
|
Late primary infection or reactivation
|
Serology in EBV-associated diseases
Disease
|
VCA-IgM
|
VCA-IgG
|
VCA-IgA
|
EA(D)-IgG
|
EA(R)-IgG
|
EA-IgA
|
EBNA-IgG
|
Chronic active infection
|
±
|
++
|
±
|
+
|
++
|
–
|
±
|
Burkitt lymphoma
|
–
|
++
|
–
|
±
|
++
|
–
|
+
|
ENT carcinoma
|
–
|
++
|
+
|
++
|
±
|
+
|
+
|
Hodgkin lymphoma
|
–
|
++
|
–
|
+
|
–
|
–
|
+
|
Reactivation
|
±
|
++
|
±
|
+
|
±
|
±
|
±
|
References
- ^ Massimo De Paschale. Serological diagnosis of Epstein-Barr virus infection: Problems and solutions. World Journal of Virology. 2012;1(1):31. doi:10.5501/wjv.v1.i1.31.