Clinical Importance of Superior Sensitivity of the Aptima TMA-Based Assays for Mycoplasma genitalium Detection

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Clinical Importance of Superior Sensitivity of the Aptima TMA-Based Assays for Mycoplasma genitalium Detection. / Salado-Rasmussen, Kirsten; Tolstrup, Jacob; Sedeh, Farnam Barati; Larsen, Helle Kiellberg; Unemo, Magnus; Jensen, Jørgen Skov.

I: Journal of clinical microbiology, Bind 60, Nr. 4, e02369-21, 2022.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Salado-Rasmussen, K, Tolstrup, J, Sedeh, FB, Larsen, HK, Unemo, M & Jensen, JS 2022, 'Clinical Importance of Superior Sensitivity of the Aptima TMA-Based Assays for Mycoplasma genitalium Detection', Journal of clinical microbiology, bind 60, nr. 4, e02369-21. https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.02369-21

APA

Salado-Rasmussen, K., Tolstrup, J., Sedeh, F. B., Larsen, H. K., Unemo, M., & Jensen, J. S. (2022). Clinical Importance of Superior Sensitivity of the Aptima TMA-Based Assays for Mycoplasma genitalium Detection. Journal of clinical microbiology, 60(4), [e02369-21]. https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.02369-21

Vancouver

Salado-Rasmussen K, Tolstrup J, Sedeh FB, Larsen HK, Unemo M, Jensen JS. Clinical Importance of Superior Sensitivity of the Aptima TMA-Based Assays for Mycoplasma genitalium Detection. Journal of clinical microbiology. 2022;60(4). e02369-21. https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.02369-21

Author

Salado-Rasmussen, Kirsten ; Tolstrup, Jacob ; Sedeh, Farnam Barati ; Larsen, Helle Kiellberg ; Unemo, Magnus ; Jensen, Jørgen Skov. / Clinical Importance of Superior Sensitivity of the Aptima TMA-Based Assays for Mycoplasma genitalium Detection. I: Journal of clinical microbiology. 2022 ; Bind 60, Nr. 4.

Bibtex

@article{be29dc07d6b84c54a81ccb04f65c7667,
title = "Clinical Importance of Superior Sensitivity of the Aptima TMA-Based Assays for Mycoplasma genitalium Detection",
abstract = "Mycoplasma genitalium (MG) is a common cause of nongonococcal cervicitis and urethritis. We investigated the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients tested in Denmark with the Conformit{\'e} Europ{\'e}enne (CE)/in vitro diagnostics (IVD) Aptima Mycoplasma genitalium assay (CE/IVD AMG; Hologic) and examined the clinical significance of the higher sensitivity of the TMA-based MG assays. From March to June 2016, urogenital and extragenital specimens from consecutive attendees at a sexually transmitted infection clinic in Copenhagen, Denmark were tested with the CE/IVD AMG assay (TMA-based), the research-use-only MG Alt TMA-1 assay (Hologic), a laboratory-developed TaqMan mgpB quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR), and the Aptima Combo 2 (CT/NG; Hologic). Demographic characteristics and clinical symptoms were collected from the patient records. There were 1,245 patients included in the study. The MG prevalence among female subjects was 9.4%, and the MG prevalence among male subjects was 8.7%. Compared to the TMA-based assays, the sensitivity of the PCR-based MG assay was 64.52%, and 55 specimens from 48 individuals were missed in the mgpB qPCR. Of these, 26 individuals (54.2%) were symptomatic, whereas, among 64 individuals with concordant results, 30 individuals (46.9%) were symptomatic; no statistically significant difference was found between the groups (P = 0.567). The improved sensitivity of the TMA-based assays resulted in diagnoses of more patients with clinically relevant symptoms for which antibiotic treatment is indicated. However, approximately half of the MG-infected patients reported no symptoms, and future research is needed to investigate the pros and cons of diagnosing and treating MG in asymptomatic subjects.",
keywords = "Aptima, Mycoplasma genitalium",
author = "Kirsten Salado-Rasmussen and Jacob Tolstrup and Sedeh, {Farnam Barati} and Larsen, {Helle Kiellberg} and Magnus Unemo and Jensen, {J{\o}rgen Skov}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: Copyright {\textcopyright} 2022 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1128/jcm.02369-21",
language = "English",
volume = "60",
journal = "Journal of clinical microbiology",
issn = "0095-1137",
publisher = "American Society for Microbiology",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Clinical Importance of Superior Sensitivity of the Aptima TMA-Based Assays for Mycoplasma genitalium Detection

AU - Salado-Rasmussen, Kirsten

AU - Tolstrup, Jacob

AU - Sedeh, Farnam Barati

AU - Larsen, Helle Kiellberg

AU - Unemo, Magnus

AU - Jensen, Jørgen Skov

N1 - Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2022 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Mycoplasma genitalium (MG) is a common cause of nongonococcal cervicitis and urethritis. We investigated the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients tested in Denmark with the Conformité Européenne (CE)/in vitro diagnostics (IVD) Aptima Mycoplasma genitalium assay (CE/IVD AMG; Hologic) and examined the clinical significance of the higher sensitivity of the TMA-based MG assays. From March to June 2016, urogenital and extragenital specimens from consecutive attendees at a sexually transmitted infection clinic in Copenhagen, Denmark were tested with the CE/IVD AMG assay (TMA-based), the research-use-only MG Alt TMA-1 assay (Hologic), a laboratory-developed TaqMan mgpB quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR), and the Aptima Combo 2 (CT/NG; Hologic). Demographic characteristics and clinical symptoms were collected from the patient records. There were 1,245 patients included in the study. The MG prevalence among female subjects was 9.4%, and the MG prevalence among male subjects was 8.7%. Compared to the TMA-based assays, the sensitivity of the PCR-based MG assay was 64.52%, and 55 specimens from 48 individuals were missed in the mgpB qPCR. Of these, 26 individuals (54.2%) were symptomatic, whereas, among 64 individuals with concordant results, 30 individuals (46.9%) were symptomatic; no statistically significant difference was found between the groups (P = 0.567). The improved sensitivity of the TMA-based assays resulted in diagnoses of more patients with clinically relevant symptoms for which antibiotic treatment is indicated. However, approximately half of the MG-infected patients reported no symptoms, and future research is needed to investigate the pros and cons of diagnosing and treating MG in asymptomatic subjects.

AB - Mycoplasma genitalium (MG) is a common cause of nongonococcal cervicitis and urethritis. We investigated the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients tested in Denmark with the Conformité Européenne (CE)/in vitro diagnostics (IVD) Aptima Mycoplasma genitalium assay (CE/IVD AMG; Hologic) and examined the clinical significance of the higher sensitivity of the TMA-based MG assays. From March to June 2016, urogenital and extragenital specimens from consecutive attendees at a sexually transmitted infection clinic in Copenhagen, Denmark were tested with the CE/IVD AMG assay (TMA-based), the research-use-only MG Alt TMA-1 assay (Hologic), a laboratory-developed TaqMan mgpB quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR), and the Aptima Combo 2 (CT/NG; Hologic). Demographic characteristics and clinical symptoms were collected from the patient records. There were 1,245 patients included in the study. The MG prevalence among female subjects was 9.4%, and the MG prevalence among male subjects was 8.7%. Compared to the TMA-based assays, the sensitivity of the PCR-based MG assay was 64.52%, and 55 specimens from 48 individuals were missed in the mgpB qPCR. Of these, 26 individuals (54.2%) were symptomatic, whereas, among 64 individuals with concordant results, 30 individuals (46.9%) were symptomatic; no statistically significant difference was found between the groups (P = 0.567). The improved sensitivity of the TMA-based assays resulted in diagnoses of more patients with clinically relevant symptoms for which antibiotic treatment is indicated. However, approximately half of the MG-infected patients reported no symptoms, and future research is needed to investigate the pros and cons of diagnosing and treating MG in asymptomatic subjects.

KW - Aptima

KW - Mycoplasma genitalium

U2 - 10.1128/jcm.02369-21

DO - 10.1128/jcm.02369-21

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35317613

AN - SCOPUS:85128801532

VL - 60

JO - Journal of clinical microbiology

JF - Journal of clinical microbiology

SN - 0095-1137

IS - 4

M1 - e02369-21

ER -

ID: 321476560