Abstract

BackgroundTo prevent the spread of drug-resistant bacteria, a rapid and accurate antimicrobial susceptibility test (AST) is necessary. Recently, morphokinetic microscopy approaches have been reported as a rapid AST method. However, these still require several hours to obtain a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC). Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) luminescence has also been reported as a rapid AST method that can detect bacterial growth more rapidly than morphokinetic approaches, since ATP in bacteria increases prior to bacterial division. In this study, we designed a new machine learning-based algorithm that predicts MIC rapidly, using a dataset that contains ATP luminescence patterns and conventional MICs determined by turbidity. Essential agreement (EA) rates between rapid and conventional MIC were then evaluated.MethodsSixty-three strains of E. coli (ATCC 25922 and clinical isolates from Toyama University Hospital) were tested. Bacterial suspensions were diluted 500-fold in Mueller–Hinton broth from 0.5 McF solutions, and the final concentration of bacteria was 3×105 CFU/mL. The suspensions were dispensed into a 96-well microplate, which had 12 antimicrobials in two-fold dilution series, and the microplate was incubated at 35°C. At each measurement time point, the amount of ATP in a 10 μL aliquot from each well was evaluated by our original measurement system, which can sensitively detect ATP luminescence equivalent to a single bacterium. After 22 hours, MIC was determined conventionally by measuring turbidity. A rapid MIC for each bacterium was estimated by the algorithm based on the dataset consisting of the rest of the 62 strains (leave-one-out cross validation).ResultsTable 1 shows the EA rate for the 12 antimicrobials; EA rates > 90% were achieved for 7 antimicrobials in 2 hours and for 12 antimicrobials in 3 hours. In 6 hours, an average EA rate > 97% was achieved.ConclusionUsing the dataset, our new machine learning-based algorithm predicted MIC rapidly within 2 hours with an EA rate > 90% for 7 antimicrobials. The rapid AST detected by the ATP luminescence method will contribute toward both appropriate antimicrobial treatment and reduction in medication and admission charges. In the future, other species of bacteria will be evaluated by our ATP method. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.

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