You have to be registered and logged in for purchasing articles.

Abstract

Performance Evaluation of MolecuTech REBA Myco-ID Using HybREAD480 for Identification of Nontuberculous Mycobacteria by Jee Ah Kim, Hui-Jin Yu, Yu Yean Hwang, On-Kyun Kang, Hyang Jin Shim, Byung Woo Jhun, Nam Yong Lee, Tae Yeul Kim, Hee Jae Huh

Background: Rapid and accurate identification of nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) species is essential for the diagnosis and treatment of NTM disease. MolecuTech REBA Myco-ID (YD Diagnostics, Yongin, Korea) is a line probe assay for identification of NTM species and can be performed using HybREAD480, an instrument for automating the post-PCR steps. In this study, we assessed the performance of MolecuTech REBA Myco-ID using HybREAD480.
Methods: Seventy-four reference strains, including 65 Mycobacterium strains and nine non-Mycobacterium strains within the order Mycobacteriales, were used to determine the analytical specificity of MolecuTech REBA Myco-ID. The clinical performance of this assay was evaluated with 192 clinical Mycobacterium strains, and the assay results were compared to those of multigene sequencing-based typing.
Results: The accuracy of MolecuTech REBA Myco-ID for the 74 reference strains and 192 clinical strains was 77.0% (57/74; 95% confidence interval [CI], 65.8 - 86.0%) and 94.3% (181/192; 95% CI, 90.0 - 97.1%), respectively. Although some rarely isolated NTM species are misidentified, the most commonly isolated NTM species, including M. avium complex, M. abscessus subsp. abscessus, M. abscessus subsp. massiliense, and M. fortuitum com-plex, were all correctly identified. Of note, all M. lentiflavum strains tested (reference strain, n = 1; clinical strain, n = 10) were misidentified as M. gordonae.
Conclusions: MolecuTech REBA Myco-ID using HybREAD480 was accurate for identifying commonly isolated NTM species and for discriminating between M. abscessus subsp. abscessus and M. abscessus subsp. massiliense. However, the main limitations of this assay, including misidentification of some rarely isolated NTM species and cross-reactivity between M. lentiflavum and M. gordonae, should be considered.

DOI: 10.7754/Clin.Lab.2022.221115