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1948. A Host-Response Assay Distinguishes Between Simple Influenza Patients and Influenza Patients With Bacterial Coinfection

BACKGROUND: Identifying bacterial coinfection in influenza patients can be difficult as the symptoms of simple influenza vs. mixed infections are often similar, leading to antibiotic overuse. A new host-response assay (ImmunoXpert™) that integrates the levels of three proteins (TRAIL, IP-10, and CRP...

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Autores principales: Paz, Meital, Oved, Kfir, Gottlieb, Tanya, Cohen, Asi, Navon, Roy, Mastboim, Niv, Bamberger, Ellen, Friedman, Tom, Etshtein, Liat, Boico, Olga, Srugo, Isaac, Chistyakov, Irina, Klein, Adi, Potasman, Israel, Eden, Eran, Shani, Liran
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6252410/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1604
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author Paz, Meital
Oved, Kfir
Gottlieb, Tanya
Cohen, Asi
Navon, Roy
Mastboim, Niv
Bamberger, Ellen
Friedman, Tom
Etshtein, Liat
Boico, Olga
Srugo, Isaac
Chistyakov, Irina
Klein, Adi
Potasman, Israel
Eden, Eran
Shani, Liran
author_facet Paz, Meital
Oved, Kfir
Gottlieb, Tanya
Cohen, Asi
Navon, Roy
Mastboim, Niv
Bamberger, Ellen
Friedman, Tom
Etshtein, Liat
Boico, Olga
Srugo, Isaac
Chistyakov, Irina
Klein, Adi
Potasman, Israel
Eden, Eran
Shani, Liran
author_sort Paz, Meital
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Identifying bacterial coinfection in influenza patients can be difficult as the symptoms of simple influenza vs. mixed infections are often similar, leading to antibiotic overuse. A new host-response assay (ImmunoXpert™) that integrates the levels of three proteins (TRAIL, IP-10, and CRP) was shown to exhibit high performance in distinguishing between bacterial and viral disease in two double-blind validation studies. Here we sought to evaluate its ability to differentiate between simple influenza and influenza with bacterial coinfection. METHODS: The study population included 653 febrile pediatric and adult patients prospectively recruited in the “Curiosity” study. Patient etiology (simple viral vs. mixed infection) was determined by unanimous expert adjudication based on comprehensive clinical, laboratory and radiological assessment. Influenza strains (A or B) were detected using multiplex PCR applied to nasal swabs (Seeplex-RV15). We compared the expert panel diagnosis with the assay that gives three possible outcomes: viral, bacterial (including viral with bacterial coinfection) or equivocal. An equivocal outcome does not provide diagnostic information and is observed in ~10% of cases. RESULTS: Out of 653 patients, 51 had positive influenza detection and unanimous expert diagnosis: 44 simple viral infections and seven influenza with bacterial coinfections (Figure 1). Antibiotics were prescribed to all seven cases of influenza with bacterial coinfection and to 20/44 cases adjudicated as simple viral infections, indicating an overuse rate of 45%. The assay correctly classified 40 of the 44 simple viral cases (out of the remaining four, two were assigned viral with bacterial coinfection, and two received equivocal outcomes) as well as five of the seven viral with bacterial coinfection cases (the remaining two received equivocal outcomes) supporting the assay’s potential to reduce antibiotic overuse 5-fold (from 45% to 4/44 = 9%, P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: The host–response assay can differentiate between simple influenza and influenza patients with bacterial coinfection, with potential to reduce antibiotic overuse. Utility studies are warranted to demonstrate that the assay can safely assist physicians in correct management of influenza patients. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: M. Paz, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. K. Oved, MeMed Diagnostics: Board Member, Employee and Shareholder, Salary. T. Gottlieb, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. A. Cohen, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. R. Navon, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. N. Mastboim, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. E. Bamberger, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. T. Friedman, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. L. Etshtein, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. O. Boico, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. I. Potasman, MeMed Diagnostics: Holding stock options, Stock options. E. Eden, MeMed Diagnostics: Board Member, Employee and Shareholder, Salary. L. Shani, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary.
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spelling pubmed-62524102018-11-28 1948. A Host-Response Assay Distinguishes Between Simple Influenza Patients and Influenza Patients With Bacterial Coinfection Paz, Meital Oved, Kfir Gottlieb, Tanya Cohen, Asi Navon, Roy Mastboim, Niv Bamberger, Ellen Friedman, Tom Etshtein, Liat Boico, Olga Srugo, Isaac Chistyakov, Irina Klein, Adi Potasman, Israel Eden, Eran Shani, Liran Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Identifying bacterial coinfection in influenza patients can be difficult as the symptoms of simple influenza vs. mixed infections are often similar, leading to antibiotic overuse. A new host-response assay (ImmunoXpert™) that integrates the levels of three proteins (TRAIL, IP-10, and CRP) was shown to exhibit high performance in distinguishing between bacterial and viral disease in two double-blind validation studies. Here we sought to evaluate its ability to differentiate between simple influenza and influenza with bacterial coinfection. METHODS: The study population included 653 febrile pediatric and adult patients prospectively recruited in the “Curiosity” study. Patient etiology (simple viral vs. mixed infection) was determined by unanimous expert adjudication based on comprehensive clinical, laboratory and radiological assessment. Influenza strains (A or B) were detected using multiplex PCR applied to nasal swabs (Seeplex-RV15). We compared the expert panel diagnosis with the assay that gives three possible outcomes: viral, bacterial (including viral with bacterial coinfection) or equivocal. An equivocal outcome does not provide diagnostic information and is observed in ~10% of cases. RESULTS: Out of 653 patients, 51 had positive influenza detection and unanimous expert diagnosis: 44 simple viral infections and seven influenza with bacterial coinfections (Figure 1). Antibiotics were prescribed to all seven cases of influenza with bacterial coinfection and to 20/44 cases adjudicated as simple viral infections, indicating an overuse rate of 45%. The assay correctly classified 40 of the 44 simple viral cases (out of the remaining four, two were assigned viral with bacterial coinfection, and two received equivocal outcomes) as well as five of the seven viral with bacterial coinfection cases (the remaining two received equivocal outcomes) supporting the assay’s potential to reduce antibiotic overuse 5-fold (from 45% to 4/44 = 9%, P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: The host–response assay can differentiate between simple influenza and influenza patients with bacterial coinfection, with potential to reduce antibiotic overuse. Utility studies are warranted to demonstrate that the assay can safely assist physicians in correct management of influenza patients. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: M. Paz, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. K. Oved, MeMed Diagnostics: Board Member, Employee and Shareholder, Salary. T. Gottlieb, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. A. Cohen, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. R. Navon, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. N. Mastboim, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. E. Bamberger, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. T. Friedman, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. L. Etshtein, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. O. Boico, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. I. Potasman, MeMed Diagnostics: Holding stock options, Stock options. E. Eden, MeMed Diagnostics: Board Member, Employee and Shareholder, Salary. L. Shani, MeMed Diagnostics: Employee, Salary. Oxford University Press 2018-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6252410/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1604 Text en © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Paz, Meital
Oved, Kfir
Gottlieb, Tanya
Cohen, Asi
Navon, Roy
Mastboim, Niv
Bamberger, Ellen
Friedman, Tom
Etshtein, Liat
Boico, Olga
Srugo, Isaac
Chistyakov, Irina
Klein, Adi
Potasman, Israel
Eden, Eran
Shani, Liran
1948. A Host-Response Assay Distinguishes Between Simple Influenza Patients and Influenza Patients With Bacterial Coinfection
title 1948. A Host-Response Assay Distinguishes Between Simple Influenza Patients and Influenza Patients With Bacterial Coinfection
title_full 1948. A Host-Response Assay Distinguishes Between Simple Influenza Patients and Influenza Patients With Bacterial Coinfection
title_fullStr 1948. A Host-Response Assay Distinguishes Between Simple Influenza Patients and Influenza Patients With Bacterial Coinfection
title_full_unstemmed 1948. A Host-Response Assay Distinguishes Between Simple Influenza Patients and Influenza Patients With Bacterial Coinfection
title_short 1948. A Host-Response Assay Distinguishes Between Simple Influenza Patients and Influenza Patients With Bacterial Coinfection
title_sort 1948. a host-response assay distinguishes between simple influenza patients and influenza patients with bacterial coinfection
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6252410/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1604
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