1. Clinical evaluation of the BioFire FilmArray ® BioThreat-E test for the diagnosis of Ebola Virus Disease in Guinea
- Author
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Corentin Gauby, Ousmane Faye, Françoise Gay-Andrieu, Ahmadou Doré, N'Fally Magassouba, Matt Scullion, Véronique Ligeon-Ligeonnet, Brigitte Dacosta, Valentina Picot, Christophe N. Peyrefitte, Jean Louis Machuron, Fodé Kourouma, Christophe Longuet, Mark Miller, and Cynthia L. Phillips
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Saliva ,Ebola Zaire virus ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ebola virus ,business.industry ,030106 microbiology ,Outbreak ,Context (language use) ,Urine ,Disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,Clinical evaluation - Abstract
Background The recent West Africa Ebola outbreak highlighted the need to provide access to rapid, safe and reliable Ebola Virus Disease diagnostics. Objectives The objective of this field study was to assess the clinical performance of the FilmArray® BioThreat-E test for the detection of Ebola Zaire virus in whole blood in symptomatic patients suspected of Ebola Virus Disease in Conakry (Guinea) from March to July 2015. Study design The BioThreat-E test was compared to the two RT-PCRs, using serum, implemented at Donka Hospital in the emergency context: an in-house developed quantitative one-step RT-PCR adapted from the Weidmann technique, and the RealStar® Filovirus RT-PCR Kit 1.0 (Altona-Diagnostics). We also assessed the performance of this assay in noninvasive specimens (urine and saliva) to detect infected patients. Results Of 135 patients enrolled and eligible for performance assessment on whole blood, the sensitivity was 95.7% [95% CI: 85.5–99.5] and specificity 100% [95% CI: 95.9–100]. Of the 37 symptomatic infected patients able to provide saliva and/or urine samples, 34 of the 35 saliva samples and all 3 of the urine samples were positive with the BioThreat-E test. Conclusions This study showed that the FilmArray BioThreat-E test performs comparably to conventional molecular tests under field conditions, providing results and interpretation in approximately 1 h. Due to its operational characteristics, it can be easily deployed in the field during an epidemic and could also be a useful tool for post-outbreak surveillance.
- Published
- 2017