Comparison of two commercial and one in-house real-time PCR assays for the diagnosis of bacterial gastroenteritis.

comparative evaluation gastrointestinal pathogens nucleic acid amplification testing real-time PCR

Journal

European journal of microbiology & immunology
ISSN: 2062-509X
Titre abrégé: Eur J Microbiol Immunol (Bp)
Pays: Hungary
ID NLM: 101569896

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
05 Dec 2020
Historique:
received: 01 11 2020
accepted: 18 11 2020
pubmed: 7 12 2020
medline: 7 12 2020
entrez: 6 12 2020
Statut: epublish

Résumé

The aim of the study was a comparative evaluation of in-house real-time PCR and commercial real-time PCR (Fast Track Diagnostics (FTD), ampliCube/Mikrogen) targeting enteropathogenic bacteria from stool in preparation of Regulation (EU) 2017/746 on in vitro diagnostic medical devices. Both 241 stool samples from patients and 100 samples from German laboratory control schemes ("Ringversuche") were used to comparatively assess in-house real-time PCR, the FTD bacterial gastroenteritis kit, and the ampliCube gastrointestinal bacterial panels 1&2 either with the in-house PCRs as gold standard and as a test comparison without gold standard applying latent class analysis. Sensitivity, specificity, intra- and inter-assay variation and Cohen's kappa were assessed. In comparison with the gold standard, sensitivity was 75-100% for strongly positive samples, 20-100% for weakly positive samples, and specificity ranged from 96 to 100%. Latent class analysis suggested that sensitivity ranges from 81.2 to 100% and specificity from 58.5 to 100%. Cohen's kappa varied between moderate and nearly perfect agreement, intra- and inter-assay variation was 1-3 to 1-4 Ct values. Acceptable agreement and performance characteristics suggested replaceability of the in-house PCR assays by the commercial approaches.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33279885
doi: 10.1556/1886.2020.00030
pmc: PMC7753976
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

210-216

Auteurs

Konstantin Tanida (K)

1Department of Microbiology and Hospital Hygiene, Bundeswehr Hospital Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.

Andreas Hahn (A)

2Institute for Medical Microbiology, Virology and Hygiene, University Medicine Rostock, Rostock, Germany.

Hagen Frickmann (H)

1Department of Microbiology and Hospital Hygiene, Bundeswehr Hospital Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
2Institute for Medical Microbiology, Virology and Hygiene, University Medicine Rostock, Rostock, Germany.

Classifications MeSH