AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent advancements in molecular diagnostics allow for the simultaneous detection of respiratory viruses and bacteria using nasopharyngeal swab (NPS) specimens, which could improve testing efficiency among pediatric and adult patients.
  • In a study using 271 NPS samples from children and 173 from adults, a panel-based assay (Allplex RP4) showed that over half of pediatric specimens tested positive for various bacterial species, while only 22.5% of adult tests were positive, indicating a disparity in bacterial detection between the groups.
  • The correlation between the NPS-RP4 assay and a sputum-based test (sputum-Seeplex) was low in adults (39.3% agreement), highlighting the need for further research to enhance

Article Abstract

Recently, panel-based molecular diagnostics for the simultaneous detection of respiratory viruses and bacteria in nasopharyngeal swab (NPS) specimens have been highlighted. We identified the distribution of bacterial species in NPS specimens collected from pediatric and adult patients by employing RT-PCR (Allplex respiratory panel 4, RP4, Seegene) to estimate its applicability in a panel-based assay for detecting respiratory viruses. We used 271 and 173 NPS specimens from pediatric and adult patients, respectively. The results of the Allplex RP4 panel using NPS (NPS-RP4) from adult patients were compared with those of the Seeplex PneumoBacter ACE Detection assay (Seegene), which used sputum for testing (sputum-Seeplex). A total of 147 specimens (54.2%) were positive for the NPS-RP4 panel in pediatric patients. There were 94, 77, 10, 3, 3, and 2 specimens that were positive for (HI), (SP), (MP), (CP), (BP), and (BPP), respectively. Among 173 adult patients, 39 specimens (22.5%) were positive in the NPS-RP4. Thirty specimens were positive for HI, and 13 were positive for SP. One specimen tested positive for both MP and (LP). CP, BP, and BPP results were all negative. However, 126 specimens (72.8%) had positive results with sputum-Seeplex (99 SP, 59 HI, three LP, and two MP), and the overall percentage of agreement between the two assays was 39.3% in the adult patients. Bacterial species in NPS from more than half of pediatric patients were detected. Performing the Allplex RP4 assay with NPS revealed additional respiratory bacteria that are not detected in current clinical practices, which do not include bacterial testing, demanding the use of sputum specimens. However, the use of NPS showed low agreement with standard assays using sputum in adult patients. Thus, more research is needed to develop a reliable RT-PCR method using NPS specimens in adult patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10532938PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life13091840DOI Listing

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