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A Pilot Study to Detect Viable ISalmonella/I spp. in Diarrheal Stool Using Viability Real-Time PCR as a Culture-Independent Diagnostic Tool in a Clinical Setting
A Pilot Study to Detect Viable ISalmonella/I spp. in Diarrheal Stool Using Viability Real-Time PCR as a Culture-Independent Diagnostic Tool in a Clinical Setting
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A Pilot Study to Detect Viable ISalmonella/I spp. in Diarrheal Stool Using Viability Real-Time PCR as a Culture-Independent Diagnostic Tool in a Clinical Setting
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A Pilot Study to Detect Viable ISalmonella/I spp. in Diarrheal Stool Using Viability Real-Time PCR as a Culture-Independent Diagnostic Tool in a Clinical Setting
A Pilot Study to Detect Viable ISalmonella/I spp. in Diarrheal Stool Using Viability Real-Time PCR as a Culture-Independent Diagnostic Tool in a Clinical Setting

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A Pilot Study to Detect Viable ISalmonella/I spp. in Diarrheal Stool Using Viability Real-Time PCR as a Culture-Independent Diagnostic Tool in a Clinical Setting
A Pilot Study to Detect Viable ISalmonella/I spp. in Diarrheal Stool Using Viability Real-Time PCR as a Culture-Independent Diagnostic Tool in a Clinical Setting
Journal Article

A Pilot Study to Detect Viable ISalmonella/I spp. in Diarrheal Stool Using Viability Real-Time PCR as a Culture-Independent Diagnostic Tool in a Clinical Setting

2023
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Overview
Frontline laboratories are adopting culture-independent diagnostic testing (CIDT) such as nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs) due to numerous advantages over culture-based testing methods. Paradoxically, the viability of pathogens, a crucial factor determining active infections, cannot be confirmed with current NAATs alone. A recent development of viability PCR (vPCR) was introduced to mitigate this limitation associated with real-time PCR (qPCR) by using a DNA-intercalating dye to remove residual and dead cell DNA. This study assessed the applicability of the vPCR assay on diarrheal stools. Eighty-five diarrheal stools confirmed for Salmonellosis were tested via qPCR and vPCR using in-house primers and probe targeting the invA gene. vPCR-negative stools (Ct cut off > 31) were enriched in mannitol selenite broth (MSB) to verify low bacterial loads. vPCR assay showed ~89% sensitivity (qPCR- and vPCR-positive stools: 76/85). vPCR-negative stools (9/85; qPCR-positive: 5; qPCR-negative: 4) were qPCR- and culture-positive post-MSB-enrichment and confirmed the presence of low viable bacterial loads. Random sampling error, low bacterial loads, and receiving stools in batches could contribute to false negatives. This is a pilot study and further investigations are warranted to explore vPCR to assess pathogen viability in a clinical setting, especially when culture-based testing is unavailable.
Publisher
MDPI AG