AI Article Synopsis

  • Infectious meningoencephalitis is a serious condition causing inflammation in the brain, and the FilmArray panel offers quick testing for 14 pathogens associated with it.
  • The study aimed to evaluate how effective this panel is when implemented in a hospital setting by comparing its results with other clinical and laboratory data.
  • Out of 496 samples tested, 17.75% were positive for pathogens, primarily viruses, but many retests showed inconsistencies, with 80% of initially positive results being non-reproducible, raising questions about the reliability of the panel's findings in certain cases.

Article Abstract

Background:  Infectious meningoencephalitis is a potentially fatal clinical condition that causes inflammation of the central nervous system secondary to the installation of different microorganisms. The FilmArray meningitis/encephalitis panel allows the simultaneous detection of 14 pathogens with results in about one hour.

Objective:  This study is based on retrospectively evaluating the implementation of the FilmArray meningitis/encephalitis panel in a hospital environment, highlighting the general results and, especially, analyzing the consistency of the test results against the clinical and laboratory conditions of the patients.

Methods:  Data were collected through the results reported by the BioFire FilmArray system software from the meningitis/encephalitis panel. The correlated laboratory tests used in our analysis, when available, included biochemical, cytological, direct and indirect microbiological tests.

Results:  In the analyzed period, there were 496 samples with released results. Of the total of 496 samples analyzed, 88 (17.75%) were considered positive, and 90 pathogens were detected, and in 2 of these (2.27%) there was co-detection of pathogens. Viruses were the agents most frequently found within the total number of pathogens detected. Of the 496 proven samples, 20 (4.03%) were repeated, 5 of which were repeated due to invalid results, 6 due to the detection of multiple pathogens and 9 due to disagreement between the panel results and the other laboratory tests and/or divergence of the clinical-epidemiological picture. Of these 20 repeated samples, only 4 of them (20%) maintained the original result after repeating the test, with 16 (80%) being non-reproducible. The main factor related to the disagreement of these 16 samples during retesting was the detection of bacterial agents without any relationship with other laboratory tests or with the patients' clinical condition.

Conclusion:  In our study, simply reproducing tests with atypical results from the FilmArray meningitis/encephalitis panel proved, in most cases, effective and sufficient for interpreting these results.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10843913PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0044-1779035DOI Listing

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