scholarly journals A Novel Host-protein Assay Accurately Distinguishes Bacterial From Viral Upper Respiratory Tract Infections

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. S351-S352
Author(s):  
Kfir Oved ◽  
Eran Eden ◽  
Chantal Van Houten ◽  
Tanya Gottlieb ◽  
Roy Navon ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Bacterial and viral infections are often clinically indistinguishable, particularly in upper respiratory tract infections (URTI), which leads to antibiotic misuse. A novel assay (ImmunoXpert™) that integrates measurements of three host-response proteins (TRAIL, IP-10, CRP) was recently developed to assist in differentiation between bacterial and viral etiologies. We evaluated the assay performance in URTI patients and compared it with standard laboratory measures. Methods We performed a sub-analysis of 464 patients with clinical suspicion of URTI enrolled in three previously conducted multi-center clinical studies that evaluated the assay performance in patients with acute infections: ‘Curiosity’ study (NCT01917461), ‘Opportunity’ study (NCT01931254), and ‘Pathfinder’ study (NCT01911143). Comparator method was predetermined criteria combined with expert panel adjudication, which was blinded to the test results. Diagnostic performance was evaluated by comparing test and comparator method outcomes. Results A unanimous panel adjudication was attained for 61 bacterial (13%) and 241 viral (52%) patients (162 patients (35%) had an indeterminate diagnosis). The assay distinguished between bacterial and viral infected patients with a sensitivity of 92% (95% CI: 82%- 98%) and specificity of 93% (88%-96%) with 11% equivocal test results. Overall the assay outperformed other routine laboratory tests (FIG 1), including: white blood cell count (WBC; cutoff 15,000 cells/µL, sensitivity 48% (35%-60%), P < 10-−6; specificity 85% (80%-90%), P < 0.05); CRP (cutoff 40 mg/L, sensitivity 82% (72%–92%), P = 0.16, specificity 79% (74%–84%), P < 10-4); Procalcitonin (PCT; cutoff 0.5 ng/mL, sensitivity 22% (11%–32%), P < 10–14, specificity 80% (74%–85%), P < 0.001); absolute neutrophil count (ANC; cutoff 10,000 cells/µL, sensitivity 58% (45%–71%), P < 10-−4, specificity 94% (91%–97%), P = 0.7). Conclusion The novel assay demonstrated superior performance compared with routine laboratory tests (WBC, ANC) and biomarkers (CRP, PCT), in distinguishing bacterial from viral etiologies in patients with URTI. It has the potential to help clinicians avoid missing bacterial infections or prescribing unwarranted antibiotics for viral URTIs. Disclosures K. Oved, MeMed Diagnostics: Board Member, Employee and Shareholder, Salary E. Eden, MeMed Diagnostics: Board Member, Employee and Shareholder, Salary T. Gottlieb, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary R. Navon, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary A. Cohen, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary O. Boico, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary M. Paz, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary L. Etshtein, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary G. Kronenfeld, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary T. Friedman, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary E. Bamberger, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary I. Chistyakov, MeMed Diagnostics: Consultant, Consulting fee I. Potasman, MeMed Diagnostics: Holding stock options, stock options

2020 ◽  
pp. 014556132090848
Author(s):  
Alper Yenigun ◽  
Ahmet Elbay ◽  
Abdullah Ozdem ◽  
Havvanur Bayraktar ◽  
Omer Faruk Ozer ◽  
...  

Objective: Allergic rhinitis is a type 1 hypersensitivity reaction of immunoglobulin E in the rhino-ocular mucosa. This study was planned to demonstrate in patients with allergic rhinitis to evaluate changes in tear, nasal secretions, and blood osmolarity compared to healthy individuals. Method: Forty allergic rhinitis patients, 25 patients with acute upper respiratory tract infections, and 26 healthy participants were included in the study. Positive patients with allergic symptoms and skin prick test results were included in the allergic rhinitis group. Tear, nasal secretion, and blood osmolarity values were examined for the 3 groups. Result: In patients with allergic rhinitis, tear and nasal secretion osmolarity values were significantly higher in patients with acute upper respiratory tract infections and those of the healthy participants ( P = .001, P = .038). In blood osmolarity measurements, there was no statistical difference between the groups ( P = .489). In patients with allergic rhinitis, Schirmer test results were significantly shorter than patients who had acute upper respiratory tract infection and those of the healthy participants ( P = .001, P = .001). Patients with allergic rhinitis and acute upper respiratory tract infections had significantly shorter Schirmer test results than in healthy participants ( P = .001, P = .001). Conclusion: Tear osmolarity was increased in allergic rhinitis patients, and this was thought to lead to dry eye findings. In the presence of allergic rhinitis, nasal secretions were found more hyperosmolar than tears. Nasal secretion osmolarity was higher in allergic rhinitis patients than in patients with acute upper respiratory tract infections and control group.


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