Abstract

Nasopharyngeal swab samples of 300 children with an acute respiratory tract infection were detected by a multiplex PCR-dipstick chromatography assay, and the results were compared with the DNA sequencing and serum IgM antibody assay. A multiplex PCR-dipstick DNA assay can specifically detect Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydia pneumoniae and shows a good specificity, with a minimum detection limit of 10 CFU/mL, respectively. Using DNA sequencing results as the gold standard, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of the multiplex PCR-dipstick DNA chromatography assay for the diagnosis of Mycoplasma pneumoniae were 96.61%, 100%, 100%, and 99.18% respectively, and those of Chlamydia pneumoniae were 95.24%, 100%, 100%, and 99.64% respectively. There was no statistical significance MP and CP diagnosis by the multiplex PCR-dipstick DNA assay and DNA sequencing (MP: P = 0.5; CP: P = 1.0), and the two assays had very high statistical consistency (MP: kappa = 0.979; CP: kappa = 0.974). The positive rate of the multiplex PCR-dipstick chromatography assay was significantly higher than that of the serum IgM antibody assay, with MP (17.7% vs. 13.3%), CP (5.7% vs. 3.3%), and mixed infection of MP and CP (1.3% vs. 0.67%). A multiplex PCR-dipstick chromatography assay was successfully established for the joint detection of Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydia pneumoniae within 2 hours. It is simple, fast, sensitive, accurate, cost-effective with good diagnostic performance, which can be used for small laboratories and point-of-care diagnosis.

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