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1 ere at least as good as results with FCU and cervical swabs.
2 e compared to local clinical methods used on cervical swabs.
3 nd 3% each from cerebrospinal fluid and endo-cervical swabs.
4 multiplex PCR was compared to culture on 26 cervical swabs, 2 vaginal swabs, 4 female urine specimen
5 in saliva samples, 28% in mouth swabs, 4% in cervical swabs, 2.3% in vaginal swabs, 9% in plasma samp
8 high as or higher than NAAT sensitivity with cervical swabs (91%) or FCU (80.6%) or culture of cervic
9 d up every 6 months for 24 months with hrHPV cervical swab and Papanicolaou test with confirmatory bi
11 por type was determined from 100% of paired cervical swab and wick samples from 20 culture-positive
12 hoeae were 92.8 and 96.6%, respectively, for cervical swabs and 80.5 and 84.9% for urine from women.
13 sensitivities of 89.6 and 94.1% with female cervical swabs and 90.9 and 86.4% with male urethral swa
14 h urine (FCU) samples from men and duplicate cervical swabs and FCU samples from women were each test
15 Drug Administration (FDA)-cleared specimens (cervical swabs and first-catch urines [FCU]) for diagnos
18 in reaction (LCR) and PCR tests performed on cervical swabs and urine with the results of PACE 2 test
23 that of PCR, and sensitivities obtained with cervical swabs exceeded those obtained with urine specim
25 Pregnant women with HHV-6 DNA present in cervical swabs had a greater odds of having HHV-6 DNA pr
26 <.0001), but both were found at low rates in cervical swabs (HHV-7 vs. HHV-6 DNA, 3.0% vs. 7.5%; P=.1
27 n LCR performed on PreservCyt and LCR from a cervical swab in LCx transport medium was high (for C. t
28 centrifuged urines (n = 195 and n = 202) and cervical swabs (n = 221 and n = 601) was extracted by th
31 Vaginal swab specimens may be preferable to cervical swab or urine specimens for the detection of Ch
35 shedding of HSV DNA was detected in 43 (17%) cervical swab samples from 273 women seropositive for HS
39 r effectively detected elevated p16 level in cervical swab samples obtained from 10 patients with pos
41 cal swab and specimen transport medium (STM) cervical swab samples were collected from 135 patients a
42 ectively detected HPV-16 in crudely prepared cervical swab samples with high sensitivity and specific
44 tility was validated by detecting HPV DNA in cervical swab samples, highlighting its promise for low-
45 The platform was validated using clinical cervical swab samples, showing 100 % agreement with PCR
47 swabs (eight studies), 17% (95%CI 7-27%) in cervical swabs (six studies), 15% (95%CI 6-25%) in vagin
50 prevalence of any HPV genotype (58% for the cervical swab specimens and 48% for the urine specimens)
51 her vaginal swab specimens are equivalent to cervical swab specimens for the detection of N. gonorrho
52 h, vaginal swab specimens were equivalent to cervical swab specimens for the detection of N. gonorrho
54 of discordant detection were greater for the cervical swab specimens than for the urine specimens, th
55 trachomatis detection by LCR on urethral and cervical swab specimens was 96.2 and 97.4% for men and w
59 ctively (kappa = 0.923); 26 (9%) and 23 (8%) cervical swab specimens, respectively (kappa = 0.843); a
61 ab specimens; 60% and 53%, respectively, for cervical swab specimens; and 58% and 65%, respectively,
62 han 100 copies of HIV-1 RNA were detected in cervical swab supernatants (CSS) from 24 (49%) of 49 wom
64 ith the results of PACE 2 tests performed on cervical swabs, using independent reference standards th
68 0 and 94.7%, respectively), while for women, cervical swabs were superior in sensitivity to urine sam
69 For approach 3, duplicate male urethral or cervical swabs were tested by SDA or by both AC2 and ACT