| Literature DB >> 25583129 |
Ryan Tuttle1, Anja Weick2, Wiebke Sabrina Schwarz3, Xi Chen4, Patrick Obermeier5, Lea Seeber6, Franziska Tief7, Susann Muehlhans8, Katharina Karsch9, Christian Peiser10, Susanne Duwe11, Brunhilde Schweiger12, Barbara Rath13.
Abstract
Acute respiratory infections represent common pediatric emergencies. Infection control warrants immediate and accurate diagnoses. In the past, first-generation respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) rapid tests (strip tests) have shown suboptimal sensitivities. In 2013, the Food and Drug Administration licensed a second-generation RSV rapid test providing user-independent readouts (SOFIA™-RSV) using automated fluorescence assay technology known to yield superior results with influenza rapid testing. We are reporting the first point-of-care evaluation of the SOFIA™-RSV rapid test. In the Charité Influenza-Like Disease Cohort, 686 nasopharyngeal samples were tested in parallel with SOFIA™-RSV and SOFIA™-Influenza A+B. Compared to real-time PCR, SOFIA™-RSV sensitivities/specificities were 78.6%/93.9%, respectively (SOFIA™-Influenza A: 80.6%/99.3%). Performance was greatest in patients below 2 years of age with a test sensitivity of 81.8%. RSV sensitivities were highest (85%) in the first 2 days of illness and with nasopharyngeal compared to nasal swabs (P=0.055, McNemar's test). Second-generation RSV and influenza rapid testing provides highly accurate results facilitating timely patient cohortation and management.Entities:
Keywords: Influenza-like illness; Minimally-invasive testing; Point-of-care diagnostics; Rapid testing; Respiratory syncytial virus
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25583129 DOI: 10.1016/j.diagmicrobio.2014.11.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis ISSN: 0732-8893 Impact factor: 2.803