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Melting curve analysis reveals false-positive norovirus detection in a molecular syndromic panel

Nancy Matic, Tanya Lawson, Matthew Young, Willson Jang, Jennifer Bilawka, Leah Gowland, Gordon Ritchie, Victor C. M. Leung, Michael Payne, Aleksandra Stefanovic, Marc G. Romney, Christopher F. Lowe

2024Journal of Clinical Virology10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Molecular syndromic panels can improve rapidity of results and ease clinical laboratory workflow, although caution has been raised for potential false-positive results. Upon implementation of a new panel for infectious diarrhea (BioFire® FilmArray® Gastrointestinal [GI] Panel, bioMérieux) in our clinical laboratory, a higher than expected number of stool samples with norovirus were detected. OBJECTIVES: The goal of this study was to investigate positive percent agreement and the false-positive rate of norovirus detected by the multiplex BioFire GI panel compared to a singleplex commercial assay. STUDY DESIGN: From October 2023 to January 2024, all prospective stool samples with a positive norovirus result by BioFire had melting curves reviewed manually using the BioFire FilmArray Torch System. Stool samples further underwent testing by a supplementary real-time RT-PCR assay (Xpert® Norovirus, Cepheid) for comparative analysis. RESULTS: Of the 50 stool samples with norovirus detected by BioFire, 18 (36 %) tested negative by Xpert (deemed "false-positives"). Furthermore, melting curve analysis revealed nearly all of these samples had atypical melting curve morphologies for the "Noro-1" target on BioFire (16/18, 89 %), which was statistically significant (Odds Ratio 173.2, 95 % CI [22.2, 5326.9], p < 0.0001). Stool samples with multiple pathogens detected by BioFire including norovirus were not more likely to produce false-positive norovirus results (Odds Ratio 1, 95 % CI [0.3, 3.3], p = 1). CONCLUSIONS: Although not described in the manufacturer's Instructions for Use, we propose routine manual review of melting curves for the BioFire GI panel prior to reporting, to mitigate potential false-positive norovirus results.

Topics & Concepts

NorovirusMelting curve analysisMedicineVirologyBiologyGeneticsReal-time polymerase chain reactionVirusGeneViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens researchVirus-based gene therapy research
Melting curve analysis reveals false-positive norovirus detection in a molecular syndromic panel | Litcius