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Study Published in PLOS ONE Demonstrates Effectiveness of Great Basin Scientific's Patented Amplification Suppressor TechnologySALT LAKE CITY, April 06, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Great Basin Scientific, Inc. (OTCQB:GBSN), a molecular diagnostics company, today announced that a research article, “A Novel Approach to Eliminate Detection of Contaminating Staphylococcal Species Introduced During Clinical Trial,” was published in PLOS ONE, a peer-reviewed scientific journal. The full article can be read here. Authored by Great Basin’s Chief Technology Officer and Senior Vice President of R&D, Rob Jenison, and Great Basin scientists, Wanyuan Ao, PhD, Adrianne Clifford, and Maylene Corpuz, the article describes a study that demonstrates how the Company’s patented amplification suppressor technology is capable of distinguishing between Staphylococcus species present in a clinical sample from a Staphylococcus contamination that is introduced during the sample collection or testing process. Great Basin’s technology was demonstrated to completely block detection of contaminants present in the environment that may result in a false positive result and potential misdiagnosis of a patient, while not negatively impacting the appropriate clinical assay limit of detection. “Most molecular diagnostic tests are challenged to distinguish whether Staphylococcus is truly present in a patient’s sample or whether the sample has been contaminated by environmental Staph species, which can result in patient misdiagnosis and improper treatment that puts the patient at further risk, increases healthcare costs and burdens medical institutions,” said Jenison. “The results of this study illustrate how our amplification suppressor technology can eliminate false positive results, which would aid physicians and hospitals in administering proper care and avoiding unnecessary costs. This technology could also be generalized to any isothermal or PCR-based nucleic acid amplification reaction, providing the potential to extend its usefulness to a broad range of tests, which supports Great Basin’s goal of delivering the industry’s most accurate and cost-effective assays for diagnosing infectious disease.” Great Basin is utilizing this patented technlogy for its Staph ID/R Blood Culture Panel, enabling the assay to detect a higher specificity of Staphylococcus species present in positive blood cultures, and will be used in the Company’s in-development SA Nasal Screen Test along with other future tests and panels. Great Basin announced a U.S. patent for the PCR Amplification Suppressor in November 2016. The study, led by Jenison, describes how application of the suppressor approach improves the specificity of detection of pathogenic Staphylococcus species present in positive blood cultures. In the article, sufficient quantities of non-target Staphylococcal cells or synthetic oligonucleotides – termed “suppressor” – were added to helicase-dependent isothermal amplification reactions such that amplification of contaminating Staphylococci present at levels below the quantities present in positive blood cultures were successfully suppressed and undetectable in the assay. The authors demonstrated that using this approach, contamination rates of as high as 40% were reduced to zero. Great Basin’s molecular diagnostics system offers low-plex and multiplex testing, with commercial assays available for the detection of Shiga Toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), Group B Streptococcus (GBS), Toxigenic Clostridium difficile (C. diff), and a Staph ID/R Blood Culture Panel (SIDR) for identifying bloodstream infections caused by MRSA and other Staphylococcus species. Additionally, the Company announced this week that it received 510(k) clearance from the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) for the Bordetella Direct Test, which will be commercially launched later this month. The Company is awaiting FDA clearance on a Stool Bacterial Pathogens Panel, and has other tests in development, including a direct-from-blood Candida Blood Infections Panel, CT/NG Test, and a Nasal S. aureus Pre-surgical Screen test. About Great Basin Scientific Forward-Looking Statements
Company Contact: Betsy Hartman Great Basin Scientific 385.215.3372 [email protected] |