
Single-Use Point-Of-Care PCR Device Rapidly Detects STIs: Lancet
- byDoctor News Daily Team
- 18 February, 2025
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According to recent research, investigators have found out that an innovative, rapid, easy-to-use, single-use, point-of-care device detected C trachomatis, N gonorrhoeae, and T vaginalis infections and it showed excellent sensitivity and specificity, and could represent an important advance in the development of rapid diagnostics for sexually transmitted infections and other infectious diseases, as published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases Journal.
Timely detection and treatment are important for the control of Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and Trichomonas vaginalis.
Therefore, Sheldon R Morris and colleagues from the Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA conducted this study to measure the performance of the Visby Medical Sexual Health Test, a single-use, point-of-care PCR device.
The authors enrolled a total of 1585 women aged 14 years and older who presented consecutively to ten clinical sites. Patients who consented to participate, and who had not used any exclusionary products in the genital area in the previous 48 h, provided self-collected vaginal swabs for testing with the investigational device.
Untrained operators received the specimens and ran the device using the guide provided. For comparison, patient-infected status was derived by testing clinician-collected vaginal specimens with the Hologic Aptima Combo 2 Assay and Aptima Trichomonas vaginalis Assay, as well as the BD ProbeTec CT/GC Qx Amplified DNA Assay and BD ProbeTec Trichomonas vaginalis Qx Assay. If the results of those assays did not match, the BD MAX CT/GC/TV was used as a tiebreaker.
The primary outcomes were the sensitivity and specificity of the investigational device for the detection of C trachomatis, N gonorrhoeae, and T vaginalis compared with patient-infected status.
The following interesting findings were seen-
a. 1555 participants had tests run with the investigational device, of whom 1532 (98·5%) had a valid result on either the first or repeat test.
b. Among the patients with evaluable results (including a determinate patient-infected status), the device had a sensitivity of 97·6% (95% CI 93·2-99·2) and specificity of 98·3% (97·5-98·9) for C trachomatis (n=1457), sensitivity of 97·4% (86·5-99·5) and specificity of 99·4% (98·9-99·7) for N gonorrhoeae (n=1468), and sensitivity of 99·2% (95·5-99·9) and specificity of 96·9% (95·8-97·7) for T vaginalis (n=1449).
Hence, the authors interpreted that " this innovative, rapid, easy-to-use, single-use, point-of-care device to detect C trachomatis, N gonorrhoeae, and T vaginalis infections showed excellent sensitivity and specificity, and could represent an important advance in the development of rapid diagnostics for sexually transmitted infections and other infectious diseases."
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