Care must be taken to avoid cross-contamination during handling of PreservCyt solution liquid Pap specimens. If testing PreservCyt specimens processed with the ThinPrep 2000 processor, it is important to follow procedures to reduce the risk for cross-contamination during Pap processing such as bleaching of the PreservCyt filter cap and changing gloves between each sample. Refer to the ThinPrep 2000 Processor Operator's Manual and the Aptima specimen for more guidance.
The performance of endocervical, vaginal, and male urethral swab specimens, urine specimens, and PreservCyt solution liquid Pap specimens has not been evaluated in adolescents less than 16 years of age. The performance of vaginal swab specimens has not been evaluated in pregnant women.
This report is intended for clinical monitoring or management of patients; it is not intended for use in medico-legal applications.
Appropriate specimen collection and handling is necessary for optimal assay performance.
Results should be interpreted in conjunction with other laboratory and clinical information.
A negative test result does not exclude the possibility of infection. Improper specimen collection, concurrent antibiotic therapy, presence of inhibitors, or low numbers of organisms in the specimen (ie, below the sensitivity of the test) may cause false-negative test results.
In low prevalence populations, positive results must be interpreted carefully, as false-positive results may occur more frequently than true-positive results in this setting.
In general, this assay should not be used to assess therapeutic success or failure, since nucleic acids from these organisms may persist for 3 weeks or more following antimicrobial therapy.
The presence of mucous does not interfere with this assay. However, this test requires endocervical cells, and if excess mucous is not removed prior to collection, adequate numbers of these cells may not be obtained.
No interference is expected in swab specimens due to:
-Blood
-Lubricants and spermicides
The effects of tampon use, douching, specimen types other than those listed in Specimen Required, and specimen collection variables have not been determined.
Testing of urine specimens with this method is not intended to replace cervical exam and endocervical sampling for diagnosis of urogenital infection; infections may result from other causes, or concurrent infections may occur.
Testing urine specimens as the sole test for identifying female patients with chlamydial infections may miss some infected individuals.
Performance estimates for urine specimens are based on evaluation of urine obtained from the first part of the urine stream; performance on midstream collections has not been determined.
This assay detects plasmid-free variants of Chlamydia trachomatis.
This assay does not detect Chlamydia pneumoniae or other Chlamydia species.