Title: Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests for Chlamydia
1Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests for Chlamydia
Gonorrhea Reaping the Benefits and Avoiding the
Pitfalls
- Bobbie McDonald
- Advanced Microbiologist
- WSLH STD Program Coordinator
- May 26, 2004
- Bobbie_at_mail.slh.wisc.edu
2Epidemiology of CT GC
- Chlamydia
- Most commonly reported notifiable disease in US
- Over 800,000 cases reported to CDC in 2003
- 3 times more prevalent in women than men
- Most prevalent in females age 15-19
- Commonly asymptomatic
- Gonorrhea
- Second most commonly reported notifiable disease
- Over 350,000 cases reported to CDC in 2003
- Rates among men and women similar since 1997
- Most prevalent in women age 15-19, men 20-24
- Can be asymptomatic
- Both can lead to PID, ectopic pregnancy,
tubal infertility
3Rates by sex U.S., 19812002 and the Healthy
People 2010 objective
Gonorrhea
4Gonorrhea Control
- A national gonorrhea control program was
implemented in the mid-1970s - From 1975-1997, rates dropped 73.8
- Slight increases in 1998 1999 have been
followed by decreases - Changes in screening practices and methods as
well as reporting may contribute - Gonorrhea Isolates Surveillance Project (GISP)
monitors drug resistance
5Rates by sex United States, 19842002
Chlamydia
6Chlamydia Control Programs
- IPP demonstration project in HHS Region X in
1988 other regions added in 93, 95 - Effectiveness of large-scale screening programs
in reducing Chlamydia prevalence in women has
been shown in older regions. - From 1988-2002, CT prevalence dropped 55.4, from
13.0 to 5.8 in family planning clinics - Increases seen in some regions probably due to
continued expansion of screening - Since 2000, CT reportable in all 50 states
7CT GC Testing in the U.S., 2002
CT and GC Tests
24 million tests each
Chlamydia Infections
Gonorrhea Infections
Reported 834,503 Estimate 3 million
Reported 351,836 Estimate 650,000
8Laboratory Methods for CT and GC
9Laboratory Methods Gonorrhea
- Culture
- Nucleic Acid Transformation
- Nucleic Acid Probe (NAP- Gen Probe)
- Hybrid Capture (Signal Amplification)
- NAAT
- PCR (Roche)
- LCR (Abbott)
- SDA (BD)
- TMA / Aptimia (Gen Probe)
- Others on the horizon
10Laboratory Methods Chlamydia
- Isolation in cell culture
- Antigen Detection
- DFA
- EIA
- Automated, single-tube, micro-well formats
- Rapid or Point of Care tests
- Nucleic Acid Probe (NAP- Gen Probe)
- Hybrid Capture (Signal Amplification)
- NAAT (same tests as for GC)
11Method Selection
- Obvious factor in many labs Performance
- Other important factors to consider
- Complexity/ practicality ease of use
- Throughput/ volume/ turnaround time
- Prevalence in target population (PPV etc.)
- Cost issues
- Looking at the big picture, the most sensitive
test may not be the best choice in a particular
setting
12(No Transcript)
13Efficiency Models Test Selection
- Compare costs of testing and treatment algorithms
in populations of varying prevalence to find
optimal strategy - Consider the strategys total cost, number and
proportion of positives detected and treated,
cost per positive - Optimal method based on goal impact most
infections within cost constraints
14Point of Care Testing
- Despite the relatively low sensitivity, use of
rapid tests can actually result in more
infections being treated - Can be useful in settings where
- Loss of patients to follow-up is high
- Few patients are treated empirically
- Rapid tests should NOT be used if not done
while the patient waits
15Selection of an NAAT for CT GC
- A variety of methods to choose from
- Many differences are primarily logistical
- Size of instrumentation, throughput, degree of
separation required/number of areas, automation
etc. - Until recently, performance differences were
generally considered to be minimal - Second generation tests claim better
sensitivity - More published data will clarify this issue
further
16Laboratory Implementation of NAAT for Chlamydia
and Gonorrhea
17Implementation of NAAT
- NAAT requires more attention to procedural detail
and QC than non-NAAT methods - High sensitivity, ease of contamination
- Susceptibility of reactions to inhibition
- Critical areas to address include
- Training (clinician and lab staff)
- Development of SOP and QA protocols
- CLIA issues
18Training Clinicians
- Should occur with any change in method, and
address - Indications, appropriate specimen types
- Instruction on collection of all specimens, with
specifics on proper collection of endocervical
swabs - Storage and transport requirements
- Result Interpretation
- Should also include laboratory monitoring of
collection and transport, and periodic retraining
19CLIA Requirements for NAAT
- Facility Administration (subpart J)
- Lab design separate areas for reagent and
specimen preparation, amplification and detection - Amplification procedures not in a closed system
must maintain uni-directional workflow - Quality Systems
20Implementation SOP Development
- Standard Operating Procedures are based on
manufacturer product inserts and supplemental
information - NAAT SOPs should be sure to address
- Dedicated work areas and equipment, other
procedures to minimize cross-contamination - Inhibition rates and controls
- Appropriate QC procedures
21Quality Systems QA
- Quality Assurance is now Quality Assessment
- A mechanism to monitor and evaluate the overall
quality of the testing process - Goal is to ensure accurate, reliable results
- Involves all pre-analytic, analytic and
post-analytic processes
22Quality Systems QC
- Quality Control positive and negative controls
on each test run - Additional positive control external to the kit
- Stock culture or known clinical specimen
- Extraction control necessary if method has an
extraction step - System to alert when positivity patterns or
numbers are our of the norm
23Verification of Performance Specifications
- Ensure that the test performs in your laboratory
as claimed by manufacturer - Requires evaluation by testing of known positive
and negative specimens - Requirements are more extensive for non-FDA
cleared methods - See the CDC document Screening Tests To Detect
Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Infections 2002. MMWR 200251(No.
RR-15)Appendix C
24Expected Impacts, Advantages and Potential
Pitfalls of NAAT
25Expected Impact of NAAT
- Increased sensitivity
- Magnitude of increase dependant on population,
initial positivity rate - Larger gains can be seen in lower prevalence
- More follow-up required
- Treatment / counseling
- Contact tracing, testing
- Increases in GC screening due to convenience
- May be a concern if prevalence is low
26Changes in CT Positivity, EIA to NAAT, Wisconsin
Family Planning
27Other Advantages of NAAT
- Less-invasive or alternative specimens
- Urine testing can broaden screening
- Female and male urine for both CT GC
- Female urine sensitivity may be slightly less
than cervical swabs, but higher than other
methods - Self-collected vaginal swabs (Gen Probe) offer
advantage of urine, easier handling - Ability to test Thin Prep Pap specimen remnants
for CT and GC (PCR)
28Potential Disadvantages/Pitfalls
- CONTAMINATION
- Because of the high sensitivity of NAAT,
contamination of specimens, reagents or work
surfaces with even small amounts of target or
amplified material can cause false-positive
results
29Contamination
- Not a question of IF but of WHEN
- Critical concern is how quickly a contamination
event is recognized and what is done to resolve
it - QC monitors to detect potential problems
- Standard negative controls not enough
- Monthly environmental sampling not designed for
quick response to events, but to detect ongoing
procedural problems
30Detecting Contamination Events
- Potential monitors include
- Positivity overall and among subgroups
- Unusual or unlikely patterns of positivity
- Proportion of specimens in a gray zone or
high-negatives and low-positives - Reduced reproducibility of results
- Thresholds may differ between labs
- Exceeding threshold may only indicate that a
closer look at all data is needed
31Identify Contamination Source
- Environmental sampling, pre- post- bleach
- Identify source target or product?
- Pinpoint beginning of event (time/location)
- Examine every step, even the unlikely
- Minute events that would be insignificant with
conventional methods may have major impact - Product contamination difficult to eradicate
- Air flow within lab space
- Tracking/ spreading on unlikely objects
32Contamination Aftermath
- The faster an event is detected, the faster the
recovery - When in doubt, DONT report it out
- Even if QC passed, if something does not look
right during an event, dont report results
(positives) - Some specimens will need to be recollected.
- Replacing swabs with urine softens the impact
- Honesty about the situation builds trust
- Opportunity to educate/communicate encourage
clinicians to discuss results they question
33Other Potential Pitfalls
- False-positives due to
- Low PPV (low prevalence, increased GC screening)
- Test of cure (too soon after treatment)
- GC cross-reactivity with other Neisseria species
- Overconfidence in results
- Loss of ability to monitor drug resistance
- Inability to test non-genital sites
34Other Potential Pitfalls
- False-positives (not contamination related)
- Care must be taken when interpreting any result
- Adding GC because its cheap or easy can lead to
problems - If TOC is done, wait at least 3 weeks
- Overconfidence in results because its DNA
- No test is 100 sensitive or specific (not even
culture) - Loss of ability to monitor drug resistance
- Significant with GC, less with CT (but still on
the radar screen) - Inability to test non-genital sites
- Need for oral, rectal screening tests not clear
- NAAT can be verified for these but can be
difficult (low positivity)
35NAAT Issues To Resolve
- Confirmatory testing (low PPV)
- Antimicrobial resistance
- Amplification/ inhibition controls
- Forensic use (sexual abuse/assault)
- Specimen adequacy
- Alternate specimens
36Positive Predictive Value
37Confirmatory Testing for NAAT
- From CDCs 2002 Laboratory Guidelines
- All positive screening tests should be considered
presumptive evidence of infection. - An additional test should be considered after a
positive screening test if a false-positive would
result in substantial adverse medical, social, or
psychological impact for a patient. - Consideration should be given to routinely
performing an additional test after a positive
screening test if the PPV is low (e.g., lt90). - Patients should be counseled regarding prompt
treatment after a positive screening test because
an additional test might be falsely negative.
38Confirmatory Options for NAAT
- Test a second specimen with a different test that
uses a different target, antigen or phenotype,
and a different format. - Test the original specimen with a different test
that uses a different target, antigen, or
phenotype and a different format. - Repeat the original test on the original specimen
with a competitive probe. - Repeat original test on the original specimen.
- Cannot use non-amplified tests to confirm NAAT
39Practical Confirmation of NAAT
- Cannot use non-amplified tests to confirm NAAT
results - Collection of a second specimen can be
problematic, expensive - Few labs have the resources to maintain a second
NAAT platform for retesting - Manufacturers are beginning to address need for a
practical confirmation method that meets criteria
Aptima ASR) - Can increase PPV by selective screening
40Antimicrobial Resistance, GC
- 18.0 of isolates collected in 2002 by the
Gonococcal Isolate Surveillance Project were
resistant to penicillin, tetracycline, or both - Resistance to Cipro was identified by GISP in
1991 has been spreading eastward from HI and CA
since 2001 - Cephalosporin resistance has not yet been
identified in GISP - Multi-drug resistant isolates and isolated with
elevated MIC to azithromycin have been seen
41Amplification Control
- Tests each specimen for substances that inhibit
amplification reactions - If amplification is inhibited in the control, a
negative result may be unreliable - Use can reduce throughput, adversely impact
clinics (most will be negative) - Inhibition rates vary between labs and specimen
types, as well as over time - Use dictated by measured rates monitoring
inhibition rates is recommended
42Sexual Assault and Abuse
- CT and GC testing serves 2 purposes
- Patient management requires high sensitivity
- Forensic evidence requires high specificity
- Culture is the recommended method for both CT and
GC in abuse/assault cases - Data and experience with NAAT is insufficient to
assess applicability in such cases - Some researchers suggest that NAAT for CT might
be used if culture is unavailable, and if
positive results are confirmed using 2nd NAAT
targeting a different sequence
43Specimen Adequacy
- Despite the high sensitivity of NAAT, infections
can be missed due to poor specimen collection - Routine or periodic assessment of endocervical
specimen quality is recommended for all types of
CT tests (CDC) - gt10 of specimens collected for C. trachomatis
testing are probably unsatisfactory because they
contain secretions or exudate, but lack
endocervical cells - specimens lacking these cells may yield reduced
positivity
44Alternative Specimens
- Specimens such as self-collected vaginal swabs
and residual liquid Pap specimens have been
approved for use with some CT-GC NAATs (check
with manufacturer) - For rectal and pharyngeal specimens, culture for
CT and GC is the only option - Verification of NAAT for some alternative
specimen types may be possible
45Summary Pros and Cons of NAAT
- NAATs are the most sensitive and specific tests
for CT and GC - Increased sensitivity can result in
- Broader availability of screening (urine etc)
- More infections detected, treated, prevented
- Tradeoffs include higher cost, increased
complexity in the lab, loss of isolates and
ability to test non-genital specimens
46NAAT Future Developments
- Though the technology is inherently expensive,
costs can come down - Competition (more tests to choose from)
- Automation, instrumentation to save labor
- Improved sensitivity, specificity, contamination
control - Built-in confirmatory assays (alternate target)
- Additional specimen types
- Improved specimen transport requirements
47References
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Screening Tests To Detect Chlamydia trachomatis
and Neisseria gonorrhoeae Infections 2002. MMWR
200251(No. RR-15) - Roberta A. McDonald and John Pfister. Effects of
the Transition to Chlamydia Nucleic Acid
Amplification Testing in a Public Health
Screening Program. Oral Presentation at the
National STD Prevention Conference, San Diego,
CA, March 4-7, 2002. - THOMAS L. GIFT, CATHLEEN WALSH, ANNE HADDIX, and
KATHLEEN L. IRWIN, MD, MPH. A Cost-Effectiveness
Evaluation of Testing and Treatment of Chlamydia
trachomatis Infection Among Asymptomatic Women
Infected With Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Sexually
Transmitted Diseases ? September 2002 - GUOYU TAO, THOMAS L. GIFT, CATHLEEN M. WALSH,
KATHLEEN L. IRWIN, and WILLIAM J. KASSLER.
Optimal Resource Allocation for Curing Chlamydia
trachomatis Infection Among Asymptomatic Women at
Clinics Operating on a Fixed Budget. Sexually
Transmitted Diseases ? November 2002