Xpert GBS

Revolutionizing Group B Streptococcus Testing
Runs On: GeneXpert® System

Problem
In Europe and the United States, Group B streptococcus (GBS) is a leading cause of infant mortality and serious neonatal infections such as sepsis, pneumonia and meningitis. Transmission of GBS occurs from GBS colonized women to their babies during childbirth.
The current standard of care for preventing neonatal GBS disease calls for the use of culture in screening expectant mothers at 35-37 weeks of gestation. Although adequate for obtaining antepartum GBS results, this is an unacceptable solution for providing timely results for intrapartum patients who's GBS status is unknown when they present in the hospital to deliver. Current rapid GBS testing methods provide an underwhelming sensitivity level of less than 65%.
Solution
To better guide proper patient management, intrapartum GBS status must be determined quickly. Introducing Cepheid's Xpert GBS, the only in vitro diagnostic test to fully meet CDC criteria for rapid intrapartum GBS testing. With results in 30+ minutes for positive and 52 minutes for negative, Xpert GBS delivers 91.9% sensitivity and 95.6% specificity for intrapartum testing.
Comparison of Xpert GBS assay and the CDC culture technique for intrapartum testing:
|
Culture
|
||||
|
Positive
|
Negative
|
Total
|
||
|
Xpert® GBS
|
Positive
|
91
|
14
|
105
|
|
Negative
|
8
|
302
|
310
|
|
|
Total
|
99
|
316
|
415
|
|
Simple
The Xpert GBS test, performed on Cepheid's GeneXpert System®, delivers unprecedented ease-of-use. It is the only molecular in vitro diagnostic GBS test designed for use in the clinical lab and by non-laboratory professionals such as labor and delivery nurses — a first for a molecular test. Now Xpert GBS tests can be run as needed — 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Users simply perform four easy steps and the GeneXpert System does the rest.
Fully-Controlled
Xpert GBS can lower healthcare costs and reduce patient hospital stays. By identifying mothers colonized with GBS, the test enables more targeted and effective antibiotic prophylaxis. This can prevent illness in a greater number of infants and reduce unnecessary antibiotic use in uncolonized women and the emergence of antibiotic-resistant GBS strains.






