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Usefulness of Combining Sputum and Nasopharyngeal Samples for Viral Detection by Reverse Transcriptase PCR in Adults Hospitalized with Acute Respiratory Illnessopen access

Authors
Kim, Keun JuYun, Seung GyuCho, YunjungNam, Myung-HyunLee, Chang Kyu
Issue Date
Dec-2022
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Keywords
sputum; respiratory virus; combined samples; diagnosis; reverse transcriptase PCR
Citation
Microbiology Spectrum, v.10, no.6
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Microbiology Spectrum
Volume
10
Number
6
URI
https://scholarworks.korea.ac.kr/kumedicine/handle/2021.sw.kumedicine/61860
DOI
10.1128/spectrum.02775-22
ISSN
2165-0497
2165-0497
Abstract
Nasopharyngeal swabs (NPS) or washings have traditionally been used to diagnose respiratory tract infections. Reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) is widely used for rapid viral detection using samples from the upper respiratory tract. However, RT-PCR is rarely applied to sputum samples, mainly due to the viscosity of sputum. Thus, we assessed the detection rates of respiratory viruses from NPS, sputum samples, and combined NPS and sputum samples using multiplex RT-PCR (Allplex respiratory panels I, II, and III; Seegene, Seoul, South Korea). Paired NPS and sputum samples were collected from 219 patients admitted to the hospital with acute respiratory illnesses from October to December 2019. RT-PCR was performed on each sample for virus detection. Combined samples for virus detection were produced using remnant NPS and sputum samples with a positive virus signal. Respiratory viral nucleic acid was identified in 92 (42%) of 219 patients. Among the 92 viral detections, 61 (28%) were detected by both NPS and sputum samples. Twenty-four (11%) were sputum positive/NPS negative, and seven (3%) were sputum negative/NPS positive. For the combined NPS-sputum samples (n = 92), all paired samples positive in both specimens (n = 61) were also positive in the combined NPS-sputum sample. Twenty-seven (87%) of the 31 discordant paired samples were positive in the combined samples. Out of the total of 103 viruses identified before combining the samples, the detection rate of the combined samples was 94% (97/103), which was higher than the detection rates of sputum (88%; 91/103) and NPS (71%; 73/103). Because additional tests incur additional costs, our findings suggest that combining samples instead of testing separate samples using RT-PCR is likely the most cost-effective method of viral testing for patients with acute respiratory illnesses.
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Anam Hospital (Department of Laboratory Medicine, Anam Hospital)
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