Affiliation:
1. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Albany Medical Center, Albany, New York 12208
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ureaplasma
, spp.
Mycoplasma genitalium
, and
Mycoplasma hominis
are associated with infection of the genitourinary tract, reproductive failure, and neonatal morbidity and mortality. We have developed a multiplex PCR for the detection of these
Mycoplasmatales
in a single amplification reaction. The analytical sensitivities of this assay were 10.8, 10.8, and 8.8 CFU for each organism, respectively. This multiplex PCR was compared to culture on 26 cervical swabs, 2 vaginal swabs, 4 female urine specimens, 49 semen samples, 2 male urine specimens, and 1 nonspecified sample. A total of 21 specimens were culture positive (25%); 17 of these were PCR positive. An additional 11 specimens were PCR positive but culture negative. Of the 21 culture-positive specimens, 17 (81%) grew
Ureaplasma
spp. and 4 (19%) grew
Mycoplasma
spp. Of the 28 PCR-positive specimens,
Ureaplasma
spp. was detected in 23 (82%),
M. hominis
was detected in 3 (11%), and both were detected in 2 (7%). In a confirmatory analysis, all samples were tested by amplification of a second target of the ureaplasma genome. True-positive cases were defined as a positive result by culture or by both amplification assays. The multiplex PCR detected organisms in 26 of the 30 true-positive specimens, as well as in 2 other specimens. Based on a 36% prevalence of infection, the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of multiplex PCR analyses were 87, 96, 94, and 93%, respectively. Multiplex PCR offers a rapid, sensitive, and easy method to detect genital mycoplasmas.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
104 articles.
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