2011
DOI: 10.1128/jcm.00599-11
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Evaluation and Verification of the Seeplex Diarrhea-V ACE Assay for Simultaneous Detection of Adenovirus, Rotavirus, and Norovirus Genogroups I and II in Clinical Stool Specimens

Abstract: Acute viral gastroenteritis is an intestinal infection that can be caused by several different viruses. Here we describe the evaluation and verification of Seeplex Diarrhea-V ACE (Seeplex DV), a novel commercial multiplex reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) assay that detects 5 diarrheal pathogens, including adenovirus, rotavirus, norovirus genogroup I (GI) and GII, and astrovirus. We describe a retrospective study of 200 clinical specimens of which 177 were stool specimens previously tested for the presence of… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…A recent study showed that the Seeplex® Diarrhea-V assay is a sensitive, specific, convenient and reliable method to simultaneously detect several viral pathogens found directly in stool specimens from patients with gastroenteritis [11]. …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent study showed that the Seeplex® Diarrhea-V assay is a sensitive, specific, convenient and reliable method to simultaneously detect several viral pathogens found directly in stool specimens from patients with gastroenteritis [11]. …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These methods have in general a poor ability to detect fragile microorganisms that are present at low levels in the stool of immunocompromised patients or microorganisms that demonstrate significant antigenic variations. The recent development of faster and more-sensitive molecular tests that can detect simultaneously a wide range of bacterial, viral, and parasitic pathogenic agents might improve the etiological diagnosis of infectious diarrhea (16,21,22). Their contribution to the management of severe diarrhea episodes in renal transplant recipients still needs to be evaluated.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[21][22][23] Commercial multiplex PCR assays for the simultaneous detection of multiple gastrointestinal pathogens, including enteric viruses, bacteria, and parasites, have recently been produced, with others under development. Some have been granted a European CE mark though none are currently approved for use in the U.S. 24,25 A panel of laboratory-developed real-time PCR assays for the detection of rotavirus, adenovirus types 40 and 41, astrovirus, and sapovirus had just been fully validated and was being implemented in the CHOP Clinical Virology Laboratory at the time of the case patient's admission. Her stool sample was consequently tested with this panel and was found to be positive for astrovirus at a cycle threshold (C T ) value of 17.02, indicating a high viral burden.…”
Section: Evidence-based Opinionmentioning
confidence: 99%