Abstract

Bacteraemia is a risk factor for subsequent clinical deterioration and death. Current reliance on culture-based methods for detection of bacteraemia delays identification and assessment of this risk until after the optimal period for positively impacting treatment decisions has passed. Therefore, a method for rapid detection and identification of bacterial infection in the peripheral bloodstream in acutely ill patients is crucial for improved patient survival through earlier targeted antibiotic treatment. The turnaround time for current clinical laboratory methods ranges from 12 to 48 hours, emphasizing the need for a faster diagnostic test. Here we describe a novel assay for accelerated generic detection of bacteria in blood culture (BC) using peptide nucleic acid fluorescence in situ hybridization enhanced acoustic flow cytometry (PNA-FISH-AFC). For assay development, we used simulated blood cultures (BCs) spiked with one of three bacterial species at a low starting concentration of 10 CFU/mL: Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae or Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Under current clinical settings, it takes a minimum of 12 hours incubation to reach positivity on the BacTEC system, corresponding to a bacterial concentration of 107−109 CFU/mL optimal for further analyses. In contrast, our PNA-FISH-AFC assay detected 103–104 CFU/mL bacteria in BC following a much shorter culture incubation of 5 to 10 hours. Using either PCR-based FilmArray assay or MALDI-TOF for bacterial detection, it took 7–10 and 12–24 hours of incubation, respectively, to reach the positive result. These findings indicate a potential time advantage of PNA-FISH-AFC assay for rapid bacterial detection in BC with significantly improved turnaround time over currently used laboratory techniques.

Highlights

  • Sepsis is one of the leading causes of death from infection, usually accompanied by bacteraemia

  • Bacterial concentrations in blood culture (BC) at the time of positivity in autoanalyzer systems have been established at 107−109 colony forming units (CFU)/ mL [11,12,13,14]. These figures are in agreement with our data from the BacTEC system at the time of positivity, and determined by both flow cytometry and plate counts to be in the range of 4.59–9.20x108 CFU/mL for three commonly isolated bacterial species, E. coli, K. pneumoniae and P. aeruginosa

  • The introduction of MALDI-TOF analysis has significantly improved the speed of bacterial identification from positive BCs

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Summary

Introduction

Sepsis is one of the leading causes of death from infection, usually accompanied by bacteraemia. In its most fulminant form sepsis has a mortality rate of up to 40–60% [1,2,3]. Sepsis-associated bacteraemia may be mono- or polymicrobial and requires lengthy laboratory processes. Detection of bacteria in blood culture by combination of flow cytometry and PNA-FISH the form of loan equipment (acoustic flow cytometer): http://corporate.thermofisher.com/en/ home.html

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