Abstract
In absence of a “gold standard”, a standardized clinical adjudication process was developed for a registrational trial of a transcriptomic host response (HR) test. Two physicians independently reviewed clinical data to adjudicate presence and source of bacterial and viral infections in emergency department patients. Discordant cases were resolved by a third physician. Agreement among 955 cases was 74.1% (708/955) for bacterial, 75.6% (722/955) for viral infections, and 71.2% (680/955) overall. Most discordances were minor (85.2%; 409/480) versus moderate (11.7%; 56/480) or complete (3.3%; 16/480). Concordance levels were lowest for bacterial skin and soft tissue infections (8.2%) and for viral respiratory tract infections (4.5%). This robust adjudication process can be used to evaluate HR tests and other diagnostics by regulatory agencies and for educating clinicians, laboratorians, and clinical researchers. Clinicaltrials.gov NCT04094818. Without a gold standard for evaluating host response tests, clinical adjudication is a robust reference standard that is essential to determine the true infection status in diagnostic registrational clinical studies.
Original language | English (US) |
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Article number | 116382 |
Journal | Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease |
Volume | 110 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Sep 2024 |
Keywords
- Adjudication
- Bacterial
- Clinical
- Viral
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Microbiology (medical)
- Infectious Diseases