Publication | Open Access
Molecular detection methods and serotyping performed directly on clinical samples improve diagnostic sensitivity and reveal increased incidence of invasive disease by Streptococcus pneumoniae in Italian children
107
Citations
33
References
2008
Year
EngineeringKlebsiella PneumoniaeDiagnosisDiagnostic SensitivityReal-time PcrDiagnostic TestSerologic TestingRespiratory InfectionInfection ControlMolecular DiagnosticsAntimicrobial ResistanceRheumatologyMolecular Detection MethodsItalian ChildrenClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyMultiplex Sequential PcrPediatricsClinical InfectionMicrobiologyMedicineDiagnostic Microbiology
The aims of this study were to evaluate the incidence of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) in Italian children and perform serotyping by PCR-based assays directly on clinical samples. A 1-year paediatric (0-14 years) population-based surveillance study was designed to evaluate the incidence of IPD in the province of Florence, Italy, by cultural and molecular methods. Among 92 children (80 with pneumonia, 8 with meningitis/sepsis, 4 with arthritis), 4 cases of IPD were diagnosed both by culture and real-time PCR and 18 cases exclusively by molecular methods. The sensitivity of molecular methods was significantly higher than that of cultural methods (Cohen's kappa 0.41; McNemar P=0.000008). The incidence of IPD in children below 2 years of age was 11.5/100,000 and 51.8/100,000 by cultural and molecular methods, respectively. Pneumococcal serotyping by multiplex sequential PCR was obtained in 19/22 samples. Real-time PCR and multiplex sequential PCR can be used directly on biological samples, improving the ability to diagnose IPD. The incidence of IPD appears 5-10 times higher by PCR than by cultural methods.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
2003 | 2.2K | |
1997 | 1K | |
2000 | 870 | |
2000 | 651 | |
2001 | 594 | |
2001 | 591 | |
2007 | 585 | |
2006 | 541 | |
2004 | 416 | |
2004 | 325 |
Page 1
Page 1