False positive congenital cytomegalovirus saliva screening results with an FDA-approved assay at two institutions

•Elevated false-positive rates were noted in July 2022 by two institutions using the FDA-approved alethia CMV Assay Test System as part of local congenital CMV screening programs, leading to implementation of prospective quality management strategies.•A minority of initially-positive saliva swab spe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical virology 2023-09, Vol.166, p.105527-105527, Article 105527
Hauptverfasser: Atwood, Emily N., Esper, Frank P., Bailey, Kaitlin, Doud, Mary Kathryn, Benton, Alison M., Friesen, Jeremy, Rodgers, Matthew J., Humphries, Romney M., Rhoads, Daniel D., Gaston, David C., Wang, Hannah
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container_title Journal of clinical virology
container_volume 166
creator Atwood, Emily N.
Esper, Frank P.
Bailey, Kaitlin
Doud, Mary Kathryn
Benton, Alison M.
Friesen, Jeremy
Rodgers, Matthew J.
Humphries, Romney M.
Rhoads, Daniel D.
Gaston, David C.
Wang, Hannah
description •Elevated false-positive rates were noted in July 2022 by two institutions using the FDA-approved alethia CMV Assay Test System as part of local congenital CMV screening programs, leading to implementation of prospective quality management strategies.•A minority of initially-positive saliva swab specimens confirmed as positive after repeat Alethia CMV testing on the same sample, orthogonal PCR testing on the same sample, and/or clinical adjudication, with false-positive rate estimated at 4.5–6.2% (substantially higher than the 0.2% reported in FDA claims).•Laboratories using the Alethia CMV assay may consider closely monitoring positivity/confirmation rates, implementing stringent decontamination, and requiring repeat testing of positives as needed. Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a significant cause of childhood hearing loss and developmental delay. Congenital CMV screening was implemented at two large hospital-affiliated laboratories using the FDA-approved Alethia CMV Assay Test System. In July 2022, an increase in suspected false-positive results was noted, leading to implementation of prospective quality management strategies. The Alethia assay was performed per manufacturer-provided instructions on saliva swab specimens. After discovery of possible elevated false-positive rates, all positive results were confirmed by repeat Alethia testing on the same specimen, orthogonal polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on the same specimen, and/or clinical adjudication. Additionally, root cause analyses were conducted to pinpoint the source of false-positive results. At Cleveland Clinic (CCF), 696 saliva specimens were tested after initiation of the prospective quality management strategy, of which 36 (5.2%) were positive for CMV. Five of 36 (13.9%) were confirmed CMV positive by repeat Alethia testing and orthogonal PCR. Vanderbilt Medical Center (VUMC) tested 145 specimens, of which 11 (7.6%) were positive. Two of 11 (18.2%) confirmed as positive by orthogonal PCR or clinical adjudication. The remaining specimens (31 from CCF and 9 from VUMC) were negative for CMV by repeat Alethia and/or orthogonal PCR testing. These findings suggest a false positive rate of 4.5–6.2%, higher than the 0.2% reported for this assay in FDA claims. Laboratories using Alethia CMV may consider prospective quality management to evaluate all positive results. False-positive results can lead to unnecessary follow-up care and testing, and decreased confidence in laboratory test
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Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a significant cause of childhood hearing loss and developmental delay. Congenital CMV screening was implemented at two large hospital-affiliated laboratories using the FDA-approved Alethia CMV Assay Test System. In July 2022, an increase in suspected false-positive results was noted, leading to implementation of prospective quality management strategies. The Alethia assay was performed per manufacturer-provided instructions on saliva swab specimens. After discovery of possible elevated false-positive rates, all positive results were confirmed by repeat Alethia testing on the same specimen, orthogonal polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on the same specimen, and/or clinical adjudication. Additionally, root cause analyses were conducted to pinpoint the source of false-positive results. At Cleveland Clinic (CCF), 696 saliva specimens were tested after initiation of the prospective quality management strategy, of which 36 (5.2%) were positive for CMV. Five of 36 (13.9%) were confirmed CMV positive by repeat Alethia testing and orthogonal PCR. Vanderbilt Medical Center (VUMC) tested 145 specimens, of which 11 (7.6%) were positive. Two of 11 (18.2%) confirmed as positive by orthogonal PCR or clinical adjudication. The remaining specimens (31 from CCF and 9 from VUMC) were negative for CMV by repeat Alethia and/or orthogonal PCR testing. These findings suggest a false positive rate of 4.5–6.2%, higher than the 0.2% reported for this assay in FDA claims. Laboratories using Alethia CMV may consider prospective quality management to evaluate all positive results. 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Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a significant cause of childhood hearing loss and developmental delay. Congenital CMV screening was implemented at two large hospital-affiliated laboratories using the FDA-approved Alethia CMV Assay Test System. In July 2022, an increase in suspected false-positive results was noted, leading to implementation of prospective quality management strategies. The Alethia assay was performed per manufacturer-provided instructions on saliva swab specimens. After discovery of possible elevated false-positive rates, all positive results were confirmed by repeat Alethia testing on the same specimen, orthogonal polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on the same specimen, and/or clinical adjudication. Additionally, root cause analyses were conducted to pinpoint the source of false-positive results. At Cleveland Clinic (CCF), 696 saliva specimens were tested after initiation of the prospective quality management strategy, of which 36 (5.2%) were positive for CMV. Five of 36 (13.9%) were confirmed CMV positive by repeat Alethia testing and orthogonal PCR. Vanderbilt Medical Center (VUMC) tested 145 specimens, of which 11 (7.6%) were positive. Two of 11 (18.2%) confirmed as positive by orthogonal PCR or clinical adjudication. The remaining specimens (31 from CCF and 9 from VUMC) were negative for CMV by repeat Alethia and/or orthogonal PCR testing. These findings suggest a false positive rate of 4.5–6.2%, higher than the 0.2% reported for this assay in FDA claims. Laboratories using Alethia CMV may consider prospective quality management to evaluate all positive results. 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Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is a significant cause of childhood hearing loss and developmental delay. Congenital CMV screening was implemented at two large hospital-affiliated laboratories using the FDA-approved Alethia CMV Assay Test System. In July 2022, an increase in suspected false-positive results was noted, leading to implementation of prospective quality management strategies. The Alethia assay was performed per manufacturer-provided instructions on saliva swab specimens. After discovery of possible elevated false-positive rates, all positive results were confirmed by repeat Alethia testing on the same specimen, orthogonal polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on the same specimen, and/or clinical adjudication. Additionally, root cause analyses were conducted to pinpoint the source of false-positive results. At Cleveland Clinic (CCF), 696 saliva specimens were tested after initiation of the prospective quality management strategy, of which 36 (5.2%) were positive for CMV. Five of 36 (13.9%) were confirmed CMV positive by repeat Alethia testing and orthogonal PCR. Vanderbilt Medical Center (VUMC) tested 145 specimens, of which 11 (7.6%) were positive. Two of 11 (18.2%) confirmed as positive by orthogonal PCR or clinical adjudication. The remaining specimens (31 from CCF and 9 from VUMC) were negative for CMV by repeat Alethia and/or orthogonal PCR testing. These findings suggest a false positive rate of 4.5–6.2%, higher than the 0.2% reported for this assay in FDA claims. Laboratories using Alethia CMV may consider prospective quality management to evaluate all positive results. False-positive results can lead to unnecessary follow-up care and testing, and decreased confidence in laboratory testing.</abstract><cop>Netherlands</cop><pub>Elsevier B.V</pub><pmid>37392724</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.jcv.2023.105527</doi><tpages>1</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3712-9188</orcidid></addata></record>
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subjects Alethia CMV Assay Test System
Congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV)
Cytomegalovirus (CMV)
Loop-mediated amplification (LAMP)
Quality management
Saliva screening
title False positive congenital cytomegalovirus saliva screening results with an FDA-approved assay at two institutions
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