Centre for Academic Primary Care, NIHR School for Primary Care Research, Bristol Medical School: Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
School of Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Langford, Bristol, UK.
Clin Microbiol Infect. 2019 Nov;25(11):1339-1346. doi: 10.1016/j.cmi.2019.06.024. Epub 2019 Jun 26.
Microbial point-of-care testing (POCT) has potential to revolutionize clinical care. Understanding the prognostic value of microbes identified from the upper respiratory tract (a convenient sampling site) is a necessary first step to understand potential for upper respiratory tract POCTs in assisting antimicrobial treatment decisions for respiratory infections (RTIs). The aim was to investigate the relationship between upper respiratory tract microbial detection and disease prognosis, including effects of antimicrobial use.
Data sources were the MEDLINE and Embase databases. Study eligibility criteria consisted of quantitative studies reporting microbiological and prognostic data from patients of all age groups presenting with RTI. Patients presenting to healthcare or research settings with RTI participated. Interventions included upper respiratory tract swab. The methods used were systematic review and meta-analysis.
Searches identified 5156 articles, of which 754 were duplicates and 4258 excluded on title or abstract. A total of 144 full texts were screened; 21 articles were retained. Studies reported data for 15 microbes and 26 prognostic measures (390 potential associations). One hundred and seven (27%) associations were investigated statistically, of which 38 (36%) were significant. Most studies reported only prognostic value of test positive results. Meta-analyses suggested hospitalization duration was longer for patients with respiratory syncytial virus than adenovirus and influenza, but significant heterogeneity was observed between studies.
A quarter of potential prognostic associations have been investigated. Of these, a third were significant, suggesting considerable potential for POCT. Future research should investigate prognostic value of positive and negative tests, and interactions between test results, use of antimicrobials and microbial resistance.
微生物即时检验(POCT)有可能彻底改变临床护理。了解从呼吸道(方便取样的部位)中鉴定出的微生物的预后价值,是理解呼吸道 POCT 在上呼吸道感染(RTI)辅助抗菌治疗决策方面的潜在价值的必要的第一步。本研究旨在调查上呼吸道微生物检测与疾病预后之间的关系,包括抗菌药物使用的影响。
数据来源为 MEDLINE 和 Embase 数据库。研究纳入标准为定量研究,这些研究报告了来自所有年龄段因 RTI 就诊的患者的微生物学和预后数据。纳入了因 RTI 到医疗机构或研究机构就诊的患者。干预措施包括上呼吸道拭子。使用的方法是系统评价和荟萃分析。
检索共确定了 5156 篇文章,其中 754 篇为重复文章,4258 篇文章因标题或摘要被排除。共筛选出 144 篇全文,保留了 21 篇文章。这些研究报告了 15 种微生物和 26 种预后指标(390 个潜在关联)的数据。其中 107 个(27%)关联进行了统计学调查,其中 38 个(36%)是显著的。大多数研究仅报告了检测阳性结果的预后价值。荟萃分析表明,呼吸道合胞病毒感染患者的住院时间长于腺病毒和流感,但研究之间存在显著的异质性。
四分之一的潜在预后关联已经得到了调查。其中,三分之一是显著的,这表明 POCT 有很大的潜力。未来的研究应调查阳性和阴性检测的预后价值,以及检测结果、抗菌药物使用和微生物耐药性之间的相互作用。