Abstract

As clinical laboratories transition to using culture-independent detection test (CIDT) panels for cases of acute gastroenteritis, culture of clinical specimens is becoming less common. The reduction in bacterial cultures available for public health activities is expected to hinder surveillance and outbreak response by public health laboratories at the local, provincial, national and international levels. These recommendations are intended to serve as guidelines for the implementation of CIDT panels in frontline laboratories in Canada. The United States of America has already seen a significant reduction in culture of stool specimens despite the Association of Public Health Laboratories recommendation to perform reflex culture on positive CIDT specimens. Priority public health organisms addressed in these Canadian guidelines include Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli, Shigella and Salmonella and, under regional circumstances, other organisms such as Campylobacter jejuni/coli and Yersinia enterocolitica. These recommendations suggest active engagement between primary diagnostic laboratories and provincial public health laboratories to determine the workflow and protocols for reflex or parallel culture. Consequently, notifiable disease definitions will also need modification, with consultation of all stakeholders. Stakeholders need to work together to enhance recovery of bacterial isolates with best practices used for stool transport and storage.

Highlights

  • Diagnostic testing of enteric bacteria informs both individual clinical decisions and serves as a critical surveillance mechanism to detect outbreaks, protect populations and to mitigate further spread of disease

  • Front line diagnostic microbiology laboratories detect the presence of enteric pathogens for clinical purposes and forward isolates to a provincial public health laboratory for confirmation and typing

  • Submission of isolates to a provincial public health laboratory enables access to information on predominant circulating strains and antibiotic resistant profiles. This crucial public health surveillance and protection mechanism and its effectiveness is under threat from the implementation of culture-independent diagnostic tests (CIDTs), which were

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Summary

Introduction

Diagnostic testing of enteric bacteria informs both individual clinical decisions and serves as a critical surveillance mechanism to detect outbreaks, protect populations and to mitigate further spread of disease. Canadian Public Health Laboratory Network position statement: Non-culture based diagnostics for gastroenteritis and implications for public health investigation. Front line diagnostic microbiology laboratories detect the presence of enteric pathogens for clinical purposes and forward isolates to a provincial public health laboratory for confirmation and typing.

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