Détail du document
Identifiant

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:7279...

Sujet
Original Research
Auteur
Young, Stephen Phillips, Jamie Griego-Fullbright, Christen Wagner, Aaron Jim, Patricia Chaudhuri, Sheena Tang, Shaowu Sickler, Joanna
Langue
en
Editeur

BMJ Publishing Group

Catégorie

BMJ Open Access

Année

2020

Date de référencement

04/09/2023

Mots clés
tests poc min workflow systems id rsv tat walk-away influenza
Métrique

Résumé

AIMS: Point-of-care (POC) tests for influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) offer the potential to improve patient management and antimicrobial stewardship.

Studies have focused on performance; however, no workflow assessments have been published comparing POC molecular tests.

This study compared the Liat and ID Now systems workflow, to assist end-users in selecting an influenza and/or RSV POC test.

METHODS: Staffing, walk-away and turnaround time (TAT) of the Liat and ID Now systems were determined using 40 nasopharyngeal samples, positive for influenza or RSV.

The ID Now system requires separate tests for influenza and RSV, so parallel (two instruments) and sequential (one instrument) workflows were evaluated.

RESULTS: The ID Now ranged 4.1–6.2 min for staffing, 1.9–10.9 min for walk-away and 6.4–15.8 min for TAT per result.

The Liat ranged 1.1–1.8 min for staffing, 20.0–20.5 min for walk-away and 21.3–22.0 min for TAT.

Mean walk-away time comprised 38.0% (influenza positive) and 68.1% (influenza negative) of TAT for ID Now and 93.7% (influenza/RSV) for Liat.

The ID Now parallel workflow resulted in medians of 5.9 min for staffing, 9.7 min for walk-away and 15.6 min for TAT.

Assuming prevalence of 20% influenza and 20% RSV, the ID Now sequential workflow resulted in medians of 9.4 min for staffing, 17.4 min for walk-away, and 27.1 min for TAT.

CONCLUSIONS: The ID Now and Liat systems offer different workflow characteristics.

Key considerations for implementation include value of both influenza and RSV results, clinical setting, staffing capacity, and instrument(s) placement.

Young, Stephen,Phillips, Jamie,Griego-Fullbright, Christen,Wagner, Aaron,Jim, Patricia,Chaudhuri, Sheena,Tang, Shaowu,Sickler, Joanna, 2020, Molecular point-of-care testing for influenza A/B and respiratory syncytial virus: comparison of workflow parameters for the ID Now and cobas Liat systems, BMJ Publishing Group

Partager

Source

Articles recommandés par ES/IODE IA

Systematic druggable genome-wide Mendelian randomization identifies therapeutic targets for lung cancer
agphd1 subtypes replication hykk squamous cell gene carcinoma causal targets mendelian randomization cancer analysis