CRP (C-Reactive Protein) is an acute phase protein that increases during an inflammatory process. Bacterial infection is a potent stimulus of marked CRP elevation with a fast induction time of 4-6 hours.2 Normal CRP concentrations are less than 3 mg/L, however, severe infection or inflammation can cause CRP levels to rise above 500 mg/L.3 It has been demonstrated that 38-56% of patients with viral acute respiratory infections have CRP levels greater than 20 mg/L which may lead to unnecessary antibiotics being prescribed.4 CRP may increase over 100 mg/L with Adenovirus, influenza and COVID-19 infections.4
MxA (Myxovirus resistance protein A) is an intracellular blood protein that is stimulated by interferon alpha/beta.5-6 Interferons are induced by viruses and form an essential part of the immune system’s defense against viral infections.7-8 MxA becomes elevated in the presence of acute viral infections and not in bacterial infections. MxA has a rapid induction time (1-2 hours) and long half-life (2.3 days), making it an ideal marker for viral infection.5
Neither CRP or MxA alone is sensitive or specific to differentiate bacterial from viral infections.7,10-12 At low levels, 20 mg/L, CRP is very sensitive, but non-specific at confirming bacterial infection. At high levels, 80-100 mg/L, the reverse is true.10-12 MxA is specific for viral infections and is not elevated in the presence of a bacterial infection.7-8
By combining the acute phase inflammatory protein, CRP, with a specific viral marker, MxA, the FebriDx test achieves high sensitivity and high specificity to accurately and reliably differentiate bacterial from viral acute respiratory infection.1
At low levels, CRP is non-specific, WHICH CAN LEAD TO overprescription of antibiotics
At high levels, CRP is noT sensitive, meaning patients with bacterial infections COULD be missed
FebriDx dual biomarker technology (CRP + MxA) is highly sensitivE and highly specific