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Published online before print June 13, 2008
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Copyright © 2008 American Society for Investigative Pathology
Journal of Molecular Diagnostics, doi:10.2353/jmoldx.2008.070149


Accepted for publication February 22, 2008.


Article

Comparison of Automated Nucleic Acid Extraction Methods with Manual Extraction

Nicola Dundas*, N. Kristine Leos*, Midori Mitui*, Paula Revell*{dagger}, and Beverly Barton Rogers*{dagger}@

From the Departments of Pathology,* Children's Medical Center Dallas, Dallas, and The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,{dagger} Dallas, Texas

@ To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: beverly.rogers{at}childrens.com.


   Abstract

Automated nucleic acid extractors can improve workflow and decrease variability in the clinical laboratory. We evaluated Qiagen EZ1 (Valencia, CA) and bioMérieux (Durham, NC) easyMAG extractors compared with Qiagen manual extraction using targets and matrices commonly available in the clinical laboratory. Pooled samples were spiked with various organisms, serially diluted, and extracted in duplicate. The organisms/matrices were Bordetella pertussis/bronchoalveolar lavage, herpes simplex virus II/cerebrospinal fluid, coxsackievirus A9/cerebrospinal fluid, BK virus/plasma, and Mycoplasma pneumoniae/endotracheal tube samples. Extracts were amplified in duplicate using real-time PCR assays, and amplification of the target at a cycle threshold of 35 using the manual method was used for comparison. Amplification efficiency of nucleic acids extracted by automated methods was similar to that by the manual method except for a loss of efficiency for M. pneumoniae in endotracheal tube samples. The EZ1 viral kit 2.0 gave better results for coxsackievirus A9 than the EZ1 viral kit version 1.0. At the lowest limit of detection (past a cycle threshold of 35), the easyMAG was more likely to produce amplifiable nucleic acid than were either the EZ1 or manual extraction. Operational complexity, defined as the number of manipulations required to obtain an extracted sample, was the lowest for the easyMAG. The easyMAG was the most expensive of the methods, followed by the EZ1 kit and manual extraction.







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Copyright © 2008 by the American Society for Investigative Pathology and the Association for Molecular Pathology.