Clinical utility of the FilmArray® meningitis/ encephalitis panel in children with suspected central nervous system infection in a low-resource setting – a prospective study in Southwestern Uganda

Abstract

Background: In low-resource settings, limited laboratory capacity adds to the burden of central nervous system (CNS) infections in children and spurs overuse of antibiotics. The commercially available BioFire® FilmArray® Meningitis/Encephalitis Panel (FA-ME) with its capability to simultaneously detect 14 pathogens in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), could potentially narrow such a diagnostic gap. Methods: In Mbarara, Uganda, we compared clinical utility (clinical turnaround time [cTAT], microbial yield, and influence on patient outcome and antibiotic exposure) of FA-ME with bacterial culture, in children 0–12 years with suspected CNS infection. Results: Of 212 enrolled children, CSF was sampled from 194. All samples underwent bacterial culture, of which 193 also underwent FA-ME analyses. FA-ME analyses prospectively influenced care for 169 of the 193 patients, and they constituted an ‘Index group’. The remaining 43/212 patients constituted a ‘Reference group’. Of all 194 CSF-sampled patients, 87% (168) had received antibiotics before lumbar puncture. Median cTAT for FA-ME was 4.2 h, vs. two days for culture. Bacterial yield was 12% (24/193) and 1.5% (3/194) for FA-ME and culture, respectively. FA-ME viral yield was 12% (23/193). Fatality rate was 14% in the Index group vs. 19% in the Reference group (P=0.20). From clinician receival of FA-ME results, median antibiotic exposure was 6 days for bacteria-negative vs. 13 days for bacteria-positive patients (P=0.03). Median hospitalization duration was 7 vs. 12 days for FA-ME negative and positive patients, respectively (P<0.01). Conclusions: In this setting, clinical FA-ME utility was found in a higher and faster microbial yield and shortened hospitalization and antibiotic exposure of patients without CSF pathology. More epidemiologically customized pathogen panels may increase FA-ME utility locally, although its use in similar settings would require major cost reductions.

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Rasti, R., Kumbakumba, E., Nanjebe, D., Mlotshwa, P., Nassejje, M., Mzee, J., ... & Gaudenzi, G. (2025). Clinical utility of the FilmArray® meningitis/encephalitis panel in children with suspected central nervous system infection in a low-resource setting–a prospective study in Southwestern Uganda. BMC Infectious Diseases, 25(1), 396.

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