Cargando…

654. Evaluation of the Febridx Host Response Point-of-Care Test to Differentiate Viral From Bacterial Etiology in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illness During Influenza Season

BACKGROUND: Antibiotics are overused in patients hospitalized with acute respiratory illness (ARI). Diagnostic uncertainty regarding microbial etiology contributes to this practice and so a host response test that can distinguish between viral and bacterial infection has the potential to reduce unne...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Beard, Kate, Chan, Cathleen, Mills, Samuel, Poole, Stephen, Brendish, Nathan, Clark, Tristan William
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6811072/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.722
_version_ 1783462390378004480
author Beard, Kate
Chan, Cathleen
Mills, Samuel
Poole, Stephen
Brendish, Nathan
Clark, Tristan William
author_facet Beard, Kate
Chan, Cathleen
Mills, Samuel
Poole, Stephen
Brendish, Nathan
Clark, Tristan William
author_sort Beard, Kate
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Antibiotics are overused in patients hospitalized with acute respiratory illness (ARI). Diagnostic uncertainty regarding microbial etiology contributes to this practice and so a host response test that can distinguish between viral and bacterial infection has the potential to reduce unnecessary antibiotic use. The FebriDx is a low cost, rapid, host response POCT that uses fingerpick blood samples to distinguish between viral and bacterial infection but has not been evaluated in hospitalized adults with ARI. METHODS: We took fingerpick blood samples from adult patients with ARI, hospitalized during influenza season, and tested them on the FebriDx. Respiratory samples were tested for viruses on the FilmArray Respiratory Panel (FARP). The FebriDx was evaluated for ease of use, failure rate and accuracy of the results (Viral, Bacterial, Negative). RESULTS: 149 patients were approached and 10 patients declined fingerpick testing. A valid result was obtained from 124/139 (89%) overall. Common user comments included test failure due to difficulty of getting blood to fill the capillary tube and difficulty in interpreting the results lines due to the variability of color change. 111/124 (89%) were tested for viruses by FARP. 69/111 (62%) had viruses detected. Of 69 patients with viruses detected, 41 (59%) had influenza, 12 (17%) rhino/enterovirus and 16 (23%) other viruses. 44/69 (64%) had a viral FebriDx result. For influenza-positive patients 34/41 (83%) had a viral FebriDx result, 1/12(8%) of rhinovirus-positive patients had a viral FebriDx result and 9/16 (56%) of patients with other viruses detected had a viral FebriDx result. These are interim results. Full results for 200 patients will be available at presentation. CONCLUSION: The use of the FebriDx POC was associated with a failure rate of ~10% and problems with the interpretation of result lines. FebriDx was not sufficiently accurate in differentiating viral and bacterial infection when using detection of virus by PCR as the definition of viral infection; however, FebriDx had a high PPV for all viral detection and for influenza detection in this cohort and could have utility in hospital emergency departments. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6811072
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68110722019-10-28 654. Evaluation of the Febridx Host Response Point-of-Care Test to Differentiate Viral From Bacterial Etiology in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illness During Influenza Season Beard, Kate Chan, Cathleen Mills, Samuel Poole, Stephen Brendish, Nathan Clark, Tristan William Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Antibiotics are overused in patients hospitalized with acute respiratory illness (ARI). Diagnostic uncertainty regarding microbial etiology contributes to this practice and so a host response test that can distinguish between viral and bacterial infection has the potential to reduce unnecessary antibiotic use. The FebriDx is a low cost, rapid, host response POCT that uses fingerpick blood samples to distinguish between viral and bacterial infection but has not been evaluated in hospitalized adults with ARI. METHODS: We took fingerpick blood samples from adult patients with ARI, hospitalized during influenza season, and tested them on the FebriDx. Respiratory samples were tested for viruses on the FilmArray Respiratory Panel (FARP). The FebriDx was evaluated for ease of use, failure rate and accuracy of the results (Viral, Bacterial, Negative). RESULTS: 149 patients were approached and 10 patients declined fingerpick testing. A valid result was obtained from 124/139 (89%) overall. Common user comments included test failure due to difficulty of getting blood to fill the capillary tube and difficulty in interpreting the results lines due to the variability of color change. 111/124 (89%) were tested for viruses by FARP. 69/111 (62%) had viruses detected. Of 69 patients with viruses detected, 41 (59%) had influenza, 12 (17%) rhino/enterovirus and 16 (23%) other viruses. 44/69 (64%) had a viral FebriDx result. For influenza-positive patients 34/41 (83%) had a viral FebriDx result, 1/12(8%) of rhinovirus-positive patients had a viral FebriDx result and 9/16 (56%) of patients with other viruses detected had a viral FebriDx result. These are interim results. Full results for 200 patients will be available at presentation. CONCLUSION: The use of the FebriDx POC was associated with a failure rate of ~10% and problems with the interpretation of result lines. FebriDx was not sufficiently accurate in differentiating viral and bacterial infection when using detection of virus by PCR as the definition of viral infection; however, FebriDx had a high PPV for all viral detection and for influenza detection in this cohort and could have utility in hospital emergency departments. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures. Oxford University Press 2019-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6811072/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.722 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. 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
Beard, Kate
Chan, Cathleen
Mills, Samuel
Poole, Stephen
Brendish, Nathan
Clark, Tristan William
654. Evaluation of the Febridx Host Response Point-of-Care Test to Differentiate Viral From Bacterial Etiology in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illness During Influenza Season
title 654. Evaluation of the Febridx Host Response Point-of-Care Test to Differentiate Viral From Bacterial Etiology in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illness During Influenza Season
title_full 654. Evaluation of the Febridx Host Response Point-of-Care Test to Differentiate Viral From Bacterial Etiology in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illness During Influenza Season
title_fullStr 654. Evaluation of the Febridx Host Response Point-of-Care Test to Differentiate Viral From Bacterial Etiology in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illness During Influenza Season
title_full_unstemmed 654. Evaluation of the Febridx Host Response Point-of-Care Test to Differentiate Viral From Bacterial Etiology in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illness During Influenza Season
title_short 654. Evaluation of the Febridx Host Response Point-of-Care Test to Differentiate Viral From Bacterial Etiology in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illness During Influenza Season
title_sort 654. evaluation of the febridx host response point-of-care test to differentiate viral from bacterial etiology in adults hospitalized with acute respiratory illness during influenza season
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6811072/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.722
work_keys_str_mv AT beardkate 654evaluationofthefebridxhostresponsepointofcaretesttodifferentiateviralfrombacterialetiologyinadultshospitalizedwithacuterespiratoryillnessduringinfluenzaseason
AT chancathleen 654evaluationofthefebridxhostresponsepointofcaretesttodifferentiateviralfrombacterialetiologyinadultshospitalizedwithacuterespiratoryillnessduringinfluenzaseason
AT millssamuel 654evaluationofthefebridxhostresponsepointofcaretesttodifferentiateviralfrombacterialetiologyinadultshospitalizedwithacuterespiratoryillnessduringinfluenzaseason
AT poolestephen 654evaluationofthefebridxhostresponsepointofcaretesttodifferentiateviralfrombacterialetiologyinadultshospitalizedwithacuterespiratoryillnessduringinfluenzaseason
AT brendishnathan 654evaluationofthefebridxhostresponsepointofcaretesttodifferentiateviralfrombacterialetiologyinadultshospitalizedwithacuterespiratoryillnessduringinfluenzaseason
AT clarktristanwilliam 654evaluationofthefebridxhostresponsepointofcaretesttodifferentiateviralfrombacterialetiologyinadultshospitalizedwithacuterespiratoryillnessduringinfluenzaseason