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Volume 5, Issue 7 (Suppl)

J Infect Dis Ther, an open access journal

ISSN: 2332-0877

Infection Prevention 2017

December 14-15, 2017

December 14-15, 2017 | Rome, Italy

13

th

World Congress on

INFECTION PREVENTION AND CONTROL

National patterns in the use of legionella urine antigen testing, United States, 2013-2016

Alhusain M Alsaghayer

1

, Abdulbaset M Salim

1

, Katanya C Alaga

1

, Marcus J Zervos

2

, Sarah Altamimi

2

and

Paul E Kilgore

1

1

Wayne State University, USA

2

Henry Ford Health System, USA

Background:

Over the past 20 years, incidence rates of Legionnaires’ disease (LD) have risen dramatically in the US, yet the

precise reasons for this increase remain unclear. One explanation posited for this increase has been more widespread use

of Legionella urinary antigen tests (LUAT) in the US. To date, however, there is a paucity of published information on the

utilization of LUAT. The aim of this paper is to describe distribution patterns of a commonly used LUAT (BinaxNOW®, Alere,

Inc., Waltham, MA) in the U.S. and across the state of Michigan where LD cases have also risen.

Methods:

Retrospective data from January 1, 2013-December 31, 2016 were provided by Alere, Inc. Using IBM SPSS (v24),

univariate and bivariate analysis were performed to describe the distribution of the BinaxNOW® LUAT by year, month, state,

city, county and zip code. County-specific data for Michigan were available and analyzed for the years 2015-2016. We estimated

test utilization rates using population census (2016) data to compare over time by geographic area.

Results:

From January 2013-December 2016, the distribution of the LUAT was consistently higher in Texas, Pennsylvania,

New York, Minnesota, and Florida compared with other states (Fig. 1). In 2016, New York state received the greatest number

of tests (n=72.072), followed by New Jersey (n=66.396), Illinois (n=55.946), Texas (n=54.824) and Florida (n=52.932). In

Michigan during 2013, 15.378 LUAT were received and this number rose to 23.232 in 2014, 25.212 in 2015, and 29.920 in 2016.

In Michigan during 2015-2016, the counties of Genesee (n=9988), Oakland (n=6930), and Wayne (n=20350) had higher test

utilization compared with other Michigan counties (Fig. 2 and 3).

Conclusions:

Overall, 68% of LUAT were provided to institutions in ten states and year-by-year analysis suggests a rising

trend in LUAT usage. These results suggest that there may be changes in diagnostic practice and/or increasing awareness of

LD as a cause of lower respiratory tract disease. Further research is needed to understand detailed trends and public health

implications in the use of LAUT compared with other diagnostic modalities (e.g., bacterial culture) for LD diagnosis.

aalsagha@med.wayne.edu

J Infect Dis Ther 2017, 5:7(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2332-0877-C1-036