Test results should be used in conjunction with clinical evaluation, exposure history, and other available diagnostic procedures.
The significance of negative test results in immunosuppressed patients is uncertain.
False-negative results due to competition by high levels of IgG, while theoretically possible, have not been observed.
False-positive results may occur in patients infected with other flaviviruses, including dengue virus, St. Louis virus, and Zika virus and in persons previously infected with West Nile virus (WNV).
Because closely related arboviruses exhibit serologic cross-reactivity, it sometimes may be epidemiologically important to attempt to pinpoint the infecting virus by conducting plaque reduction neutralization tests (PRNT) using an appropriate battery of closely related viruses. Such testing is available through the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention and select public health laboratories.
WNV antibody results for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) should be interpreted with caution. Complicating factors include low antibody levels found in CSF, passive transfer of antibody from blood, and contamination via a traumatic lumbar puncture.