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On the Diagnosis and Management of Viral Respiratory Infections

Abstract
Acute respiratory tract infections (ARTIs), are the most common infections in man, and represent a major global health burden. Viruses, most often causing a mild and self-limiting disease, yet with substantial morbidity and high costs for society, mainly cause upper respiratory tract infections. 70% of all infections in primary care in Sweden are due to ARTIs. Lower respiratory infections on the other hand constitute the third leading cause of death worldwide, mainly in children <5 years of age in resource poor settings. Distinguishing virus from bacteria can be difficult, and often lead to an over-prescription of antibiotics. Modern molecular based diagnostic methods have increased the possibility of an etiologic diagnosis of ARTIs significantly. This thesis aims to evaluate the use of a multiplex real time PCR assay targeting 13 respiratory viruses and two bacteria, from a clinical perspective. In paper I, a retrospective study of 954 nasopharyngeal samples, the PCR assay, which is based on automated specimen extraction and multiplex amplification, is described. Detection rate was 48%. Streamlined testing and cost limitation (€ 33 per sample) along with high accuracy and prompt result delivery, is key to successful implementation of broad molecular testing. Paper II evaluates in a prospective study of 209 adults with ARTI in primary care, and 100 asymptomatic controls, the impact duration of symptoms have on detection rate. Overall positive yield was 43% in patients and 2% in controls, with a significantly higher detection rate in patients with < 6 days duration of symptoms (51%) compared to ≥ 7 days (30%, p<0.01). Having access to the PCR assay reduced antibiotic prescription rates by 50%, in a prospective study (paper III) of 426 adults with ARTI. Patients receiving a result within 48 hours were prescribed antibiotics in 6,8% (n=14) compared to 15.1% (n=33, p<0.01) in the delayed result group. The diagnostic yield in paper IV, a retrospective study of 8753 patients of all ages during 36 consecutive months, was significantly higher during winter (54.7%) than in summer (31.1%, p<0.001), and in children (61.5%) compared with adults (30.5%, p<0.001). Rhinovirus was the most frequently found virus (32.5%), independent of season, and displayed a high genetic variability across seasons. The findings of this thesis support the implementation of similar methods in routine clinical care.
Parts of work
I. Brittain-Long R, Nord S, Olofsson S, Westin J, Andersson L-M, Lindh M. Multiplex real-time PCR for detection of respiratory tract infections. Journal of Clinical Virology 41 (2008) 53-56. ::pmid::18093871
 
II. Brittain-Long R, Westin J, Olofsson S, Lindh M, Andersson L-M. Prospective evaluation of a novel multiplex real-time PCR assay for detection of fifteen respiratory pathogens - Duration of symptoms significantly affects detection rate. Journal of Clinical Virology 47 (2010) 263-267. ::pmid::20080440
 
III. Brittain-Long R, Westin J, Olofsson S, Lindh M, Andersson L-M. The use of a multiplex real time-PCR method targeting thirteen viruses - impact on antibiotic prescription rate in a prospective study. ::doi::10.1186/1741-7015-9-44
 
IV. Brittain-Long R, Andersson L-M, Lindh M, Westin J. Seasonal variations influence diagnostic yield of a multiplex PCR assay targeting 13 respiratory viruses. ::doi::10.3109/00365548.2011.598876
 
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Biomedicine. Department of Infectious Medicine
Disputation
Fredagen den 11 juni 2010, kl 13.00, Föreläsningssalen, Infektionskliniken, Sahlgrenska universitetssjukhuset/Östra, Göteborg
Date of defence
2010-06-11
E-mail
brittainlong@gmail.com
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/22184
Collections
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för biomedicin
  • Doctoral Theses from Sahlgrenska Academy
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
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Abstract (235.6Kb)
Errata (42.17Kb)
Doctoral thesis (1.381Mb)
Date
2010-05-28
Author
Brittain-Long, Robin
Keywords
Respiratory virus
Respiratory tract infection
Real-time PCR
Multiplex PCR
Antibiotic use
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-8118-4
Language
eng
Metadata
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