Evaluation of the adenosine triphosphate test in the diagnosis of urinary tract infection

1991 
Determination by bioluminescence of the bacterial adenosine triphosphate (ATP) level in urine was evaluated as a method for detection of bacteriuria in 1126 women with symptoms of UTI and 530 attending for follow-up. Conventional urine culture was used as reference method. The criterion for bacteriuria was growth of ≥ 105 cfu/ml, giving a prevalence of 0.60. ATP levels of 50 nmol/l indicated abacteriuria and bacteriuria, respectively, whereas intermediate concentrations required culture if the nitrite test was negative. With this diagnostic strategy the sensitivity and specificity was 0.96 and 0.90 at the first visit and 0.90 and 0.98 at follow-up. With some methodological improvement the ATP test could be useful in medium-sized and small laboratories.
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