Publications by authors named "D H Persing"

Article Synopsis
  • A national program integrated molecular point-of-care (POC) testing for chlamydia, gonorrhoea, and trichomonas in 49 primary care clinics in Australia to improve diagnostic access and treatment speed for First Nations peoples.
  • Between 2016 and 2022, the program showed a significant increase in monthly testing, and treated a higher percentage of patients within two to seven days compared to previous practices, resulting in thousands of infectious days averted.
  • The evaluation revealed high test concordance rates and low failure rates, indicating that the POC testing was effective and of high quality, contributing to both individual health benefits and potentially reducing disease transmission in First Nations communities.
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Introduction: Testing at the point of care (we also refer to the 'point of need'), with rapid, actionable results reported to the patient and provider within hours can impact the individual as well as public health. Faster testing is good for patients and public health outcomes during 'peace time' (outside of the pandemic setting).

Areas Covered: Testing at the point of need was important during the COVID-19 pandemic to meet testing capacity demands, providing actionable results, and for providing testing within communities to increase access for all populations.

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The Xpert MTB/XDR assay met the critical need for etiologic diagnosis of tuberculosis and rifampin resistance in previous studies. However, its benefits in tailoring the treatment regimen and improving the outcome for patients with rifampin-resistant tuberculosis (RR-TB) require further investigation. In this study, the Xpert MTB/XDR assay was used to determine the resistance profile of second-line drugs for RR-TB patients in two registered multicenter clinical trials, TB-TRUST (NCT03867136) and TB-TRUST-plus (NCT04717908), with the aim of testing the efficacy of all-oral shorter regimens in RR-TB patients in China.

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Fever is a common presentation to urgent-care services and is linked to multiple disease processes. To rapidly determine the etiology of fever, improved diagnostic modalities are necessary. This prospective study of 100 hospitalized febrile patients included both positive (FP) and negative (FN) subjects in terms of infection status and 22 healthy controls (HC).

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Nearly 40 years have elapsed since the invention of the PCR, with its extremely sensitive and specific ability to detect nucleic acids via enzyme-mediated amplification. In turn, more than 2 years have passed since the onset of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, during which time molecular diagnostics for infectious diseases have assumed a larger global role than ever before. In this context, we review broadly the progression of molecular techniques in clinical microbiology, to their current prominence.

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