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Vulvovaginal-swab or first-catch urine specimen to detect Chlamydia trachomatis in women in a community setting?

Authors :
Matthias Egger
Sue Skidmore
Paddy Horner
Chris Salisbury
Jane Thomas
Alan Herring
Emma Sanford
Anne McCarthy
E. Owen Caul
John Macleod
Jonathan A C Sterne
Ian Paul
Joanne Sell
Nicola Low
Source :
Journal of clinical microbiology. 44(12)
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Screening for chlamydia in women is widely recommended. We evaluated the performance of two nucleic acid amplification tests for detecting Chlamydia trachomatis in self-collected vulvovaginal-swab and first-catch urine specimens from women in a community setting and a strategy for optimizing the sensitivity of an amplified enzyme immunoassay on vulvovaginal-swab specimens. We tested 2,745 paired vulvovaginal-swab and urine specimens by PCR (Roche Cobas) or strand displacement amplification (SDA; Becton Dickinson). There were 146 women infected with chlamydia. The assays detected 97.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 93.1 to 99.2%) of infected patients with vulvovaginal-swab specimens and 91.8% (86.1 to 95.7%) with urine specimens. We tested 2,749 vulvovaginal-swab specimens with both a nucleic acid amplification test and a polymer conjugate-enhanced enzyme immunoassay with negative-gray-zone testing. The relative sensitivities obtained after retesting specimens in the negative gray zone were 74.3% (95% CI, 62.8 to 83.8%) with PCR and 58.3% (95% CI, 46.1 to 69.8%) with SDA. In community settings, both vulvovaginal-swab and first-catch urine specimens from women are suitable substrates for nucleic acid amplification tests, but enzyme immunoassays, even after negative-gray-zone testing, should not be used in screening programs.

Details

ISSN :
00951137
Volume :
44
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5a70dcccd99ff25b21f18f9b678fa40c