Limited Utility of Polymerase Chain Reaction in Induced Sputum Specimens for Determining the Causes of Childhood Pneumonia in Resource-Poor Settings: Findings From the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) Study.

Donald M Thea; Phil Seidenberg; Daniel E Park; Lawrence Mwananyanda; Wei Fu; Qiyuan Shi; Henry C Baggett; W Abdullah Brooks; Daniel R Feikin; Stephen RC Howie; +29 more... Maria Deloria Knoll; Karen L Kotloff; Orin S Levine; Shabir A Madhi; Katherine L O'Brien; J Anthony G Scott ORCID logo; Martin Antonio ORCID logo; Juliet O Awori; Vicky L Baillie; Andrea N DeLuca; Amanda J Driscoll; Melissa M Higdon; Lokman Hossain; Yasmin Jahan; Ruth A Karron; Sidi Kazungu; Mengying Li; David P Moore; Susan C Morpeth; Ogochukwu Ofordile; Christine Prosperi; Ornuma Sangwichian; Pongpun Sawatwong; Mamadou Sylla; Milagritos D Tapia; Scott L Zeger; David R Murdoch; Laura L Hammitt; PERCH Study Group; (2017) Limited Utility of Polymerase Chain Reaction in Induced Sputum Specimens for Determining the Causes of Childhood Pneumonia in Resource-Poor Settings: Findings From the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) Study. Clinical infectious diseases, 64 (suppl_). S289-S300. ISSN 1058-4838 DOI: 10.1093/cid/cix098
Copy

BACKGROUND.: Sputum examination can be useful in diagnosing the cause of pneumonia in adults but is less well established in children. We sought to assess the diagnostic utility of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for detection of respiratory viruses and bacteria in induced sputum (IS) specimens from children hospitalized with severe or very severe pneumonia. METHODS.: Among children aged 1-59 months, we compared organism detection by multiplex PCR in IS and nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal (NP/OP) specimens. To assess whether organism presence or density in IS specimens was associated with chest radiographic evidence of pneumonia (radiographic pneumonia), we compared prevalence and density in IS specimens from children with radiographic pneumonia and children with suspected pneumonia but without chest radiographic changes or clinical or laboratory findings suggestive of pneumonia (nonpneumonia group). RESULTS.: Among 4232 cases with World Health Organization-defined severe or very severe pneumonia, we identified 1935 (45.7%) with radiographic pneumonia and 573 (13.5%) with nonpneumonia. The organism detection yield was marginally improved with IS specimens (96.2% vs 92.4% for NP/OP specimens for all viruses combined [P = .41]; 96.9% vs 93.3% for all bacteria combined [P = .01]). After accounting for presence in NP/OP specimens, no organism was detected more frequently in the IS specimens from the radiographic pneumonia compared with the nonpneumonia cases. Among high-quality IS specimens, there were no statistically significant differences in organism density, except with cytomegalovirus, for which there was a higher quantity in the IS specimens from cases with radiographic pneumonia compared with the nonpneumonia cases (median cycle threshold value, 27.9 vs 28.5, respectively; P = .01). CONCLUSIONS.: Using advanced molecular methods with IS specimens provided little additional diagnostic information beyond that obtained with NP/OP swab specimens.


picture_as_pdf
Limited Utility of Polymerase Chain Reaction in Induced Sputum Specimens.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: 3.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads