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Medical Overview Screening & Treatment Education & Counseling Laboratory & Testing Quality Assurance & Data Summary of Treatment Guidelines Glossary Appendix

 

Laboratory and Testing

 

This section contains discussion and/or specific guidelines for the following topics:


Laboratory Testing Methods

There are a number of laboratory methodologies available to test for Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct).  Cell culture of inoculate prepared from urogenital specimens was considered the gold standard until recently.  Culture test should still be used for cases of suspected sexual abuse or assault, but newer technologies are now available and preferable for large scale screening activities.  Antigen and nucleic acid detection technologies are now widely used in public health settings.  Newer nucleic acid amplification tests are rapidly gaining favor as evidence is accumulating that these tests can be even more sensitive than culture.  Screening programs using nucleic acid amplification tests have found Ct prevalence rates to be higher than previously believed.                                                                         

Compared to culture, antigen and nucleic acid detection tests are less expensive, faster to process, and have fewer specimen transport restrictions.  Although these are distinct advantages to these tests, distinct limitations have also been noted.  These tests can be less specific than culture and may produce false-positive results.  The accuracy of these tests is highly dependent on correct specimen collection.

All of the Region VI public health laboratories are currently using the Gen-Probe® PACE 2, nucleic acid detection test.  However, as the nucleic acid amplification tests become more affordable and some of the transport issues are resolved, it is possible that these newer technologies will supplement or supplant existing technologies.

Essentially, the amplification technologies are designed to extract DNA from client specimens and to copy the DNA sequence enough times to render the DNA easily detectable by a variety of methods.

Sensitivity and specificity are both extremely high due to the nature of the amplification.  Currently, the costs associated with amplification technologies are quite high, but industry competition is rapidly lowering prices available to public health laboratories.  Amplification tests can have useful applications in situations where urine can be collected but physical exams may be difficult to undertake, for example, in a school based screening program.

A laboratory test must be proven to possess the necessary sensitivity and specificity to give valid, usable results.  Sensitivity is defined as the ability of a test to detect infection if it is present, i.e., to correctly classify infected individuals as positive.  A highly sensitive test gives few false-negatives.  Specificity is defined as the ability of a tests to detect absence of infection if it is NOT present, i.e., to correctly identify uninfected individuals as negative.  A test with high specificity gives few false-positives.

Interfering substances may give false negative reactions to a small percentage of amplification tests.

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Specimen Rejection Criteria - Gen-Probe

An essential component of quality assurance is the establishment of criteria for rejection of Ct specimens of poor or substandard quality. The following rejection criteria are utilized by the laboratory staff to determine when and why specimens must be rejected for testing. Rejection criteria also give guidance to submitters to help them improve collection and handling at the clinic site.

  • No Client Identification on Specimen or Mismatched Identification on Specimen and Laboratory Requisition Form.  Collection directions and federal regulations require writing the client’s name and other unique identifier, on the specimen collection tube as well as on the test requisition form.  The names or unique identifiers must match exactly between the specimen tube and the requisition form.
  • Expired Transport Medium.  The expiration date of each collection kit is printed on the outside of the kit wrapper and on each collection tube.  Specimens will not be tested if the collection kit has expired.

  • No Swab in Tube.  The male collection kit contains one cotton-tipped swab.  The female kit contains two swabs.  The first female swab is used to remove excess mucous and is discarded.  The second is used to collect the specimen and is broken off at the scored area in the collection tube.  The swabs, from both male and female kits, must be left in the collection tube for transport to the laboratory.

  •  Wrong Swab Used.  The system is only approved for use with swabs supplied in the collection kits.  These swabs have been tested and will not alter the biochemical reactions of the test.  Wooden swabs or other non-Gen-Probe swabs are not acceptable.

  • Wrong Kit Used.  The collection kits are different for males and females.  The male kit contains 0.5 ml of fluid.  The female kit contains 1.0 ml of fluid to make up for the fluid that is soaked up by the larger female swab.  Using the wrong tube or swab changes the proportion of fluid to specimen and may give erroneous results.

  • Improper Collection Site.  The Gen-Probe PACE 2 system is only designed to test conjunctival, female endocervical and male urethral specimens.  It is not recommended for medico-legal cases and is not acceptable for throat or rectal swabs or for antimicrobial susceptibility testing.  Additionally, vaginal specimens including those collected from hysterectomized women are not suitable for testing.

  • Quantity Not Sufficient (QNS).  There is not enough specimen to perform the testing.  It may have leaked out in transit or the tube may have broken.  Sometimes the specimen is very mucoid, an indication that the collection area was not swabbed clean prior to collection, or the swab has disintegrated and the specimen cannot be pipetted.

  • Specimens Greater than 7 Days Old.  The system is approved for use on specimens up to seven days after collection.  Testing after seven days may result in invalid results.  It is therefore imperative that the date of collection be provided on the requisition form.

  • Specimens Too Bloody for Testing.  Grossly bloody specimens may interfere with the performance of the PACE 2 or PACE 2C systems, therefore, specimens containing greater than 80 Fl per ml of blood are not accepted for testing.

  • Specimens received on the following individuals should be flagged for inclusion of a disclaimer if tested for C. trachomatis using non-culture methods:

    • Victims of assault or sexual abuse

    • Children less than 12 years of age

According to CDC guidelines, only cell culture methods that employ C. trachomatis-specific antibodies should be used to detect chlamydial infections in the investigation of a possible sexual abuse or assault case.

Non-culture tests like the Gen-Probe PACE 2 are not sufficiently specific to be used in the investigation of sexual abuse or assault for legal purposes.

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Turnaround Times

woman looking in microscope

Laboratory results should be reported to the clinic as rapidly as possible so that immediate follow-up and client management can be initiated.  Turnaround time should be monitored periodically to determine if there are delays in specimen transport to the laboratory, testing and reporting of laboratory results, or delays in reports reaching the clinics. A reasonable turnaround time within the laboratory is three working days after the date of receipt of specimen in the laboratory.

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Summary

A culture test should be used for cases of suspected sexual abuse or assault.

The accuracy of all laboratory tests depends on correct specimen collection and handling.

Laboratories are required to reject specimens that do not meet essential elements of laboratory quality assurance standards.

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Case Study

Case 5: A 19 year old female presents with lower abdominal pain and fever.  She is currently menstruating.

Question: Can this client be tested?  Will blood affect the accuracy of the Gen-Probe test?

  

Case 6: You receive a phone call from the laboratory telling you that the swab used for the specimen was not from the Gen-Probe collection kit.

Question: Will this affect the test result?  Why or Why not?

  

Case 7: Your lab person tells you that the doctor collected a chlamydia swab late Friday and put it in the freezer to be mailed out Monday morning.

Question: Can this specimen be tested?

 

(Case Study answers found in Appendix)


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