
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Joseph Yao, M.D., explains how Mayo Clinic Laboratories' new quantitative assay (Mayo ID: ADVQU) goes beyond qualitative testing to evaluate transplant patients for adenovirus infection. Adenovirus can cause life-threatening disease in immunocompromised transplant patients, especially children.
(01:14)
Could you give us a brief overview of this assay?
(02:06)
Can you explain the differences of the qualitative and quantitative methods and why we made the change to a quantitative adenovirus method?
(04:00)
When is this test typically ordered for transplant patients? Is it used throughout their treatment?
(06:56)
Could an immunocompromised person be unknowingly infected?
(07:31)
Is our quantitative method approved for pediatric patients?
(08:00)
How are the test results used to treat patients?
(10:36)
What other infections might providers consider alongside adeovirus?
5
2121 ratings
Joseph Yao, M.D., explains how Mayo Clinic Laboratories' new quantitative assay (Mayo ID: ADVQU) goes beyond qualitative testing to evaluate transplant patients for adenovirus infection. Adenovirus can cause life-threatening disease in immunocompromised transplant patients, especially children.
(01:14)
Could you give us a brief overview of this assay?
(02:06)
Can you explain the differences of the qualitative and quantitative methods and why we made the change to a quantitative adenovirus method?
(04:00)
When is this test typically ordered for transplant patients? Is it used throughout their treatment?
(06:56)
Could an immunocompromised person be unknowingly infected?
(07:31)
Is our quantitative method approved for pediatric patients?
(08:00)
How are the test results used to treat patients?
(10:36)
What other infections might providers consider alongside adeovirus?
129 Listeners
90,886 Listeners
38,189 Listeners
1,708 Listeners
493 Listeners
12,088 Listeners
280 Listeners
111,864 Listeners
56,221 Listeners
16,849 Listeners
9,555 Listeners
7,928 Listeners
16 Listeners
2,969 Listeners
100 Listeners