Abstract

Simple SummaryOdontogenic infections are very common. The course of disease ranges from mild to severe and sometimes even life-threatening infections. Optimal therapy is based on rapid abscess incision and, especially in severe cases, on adjuvant antibiotic therapy that ideally targets the culprit bacteria. In order to identify these bacteria, clinicians usually perform cultural analysis from smears of pus and aim for antibiotic susceptibility testing. In recent years, using new molecular methods, it has become possible to carry out a much more detailed analysis of the bacterial colonization of different parts of the human body by determining a microbiome. In our study, we have, for the first time, compared such a microbiome of odontogenic abscesses with cultural bacterial determination carried out in the clinical routine of a university hospital. The key finding of the study is not only that considerably more bacteria can be detected in the abscess in this way but also that easily cultivated bacteria dominate over the actual fastidious pathogenic bacteria. Thus, routine clinical culture probably only provides a distorted picture of reality and should be supplemented by molecular methods in the future.Odontogenic abscesses are usually caused by bacteria of the oral microbiome. However, the diagnostic culture of these bacteria is often prone to errors and sometimes fails completely due to the fastidiousness of the relevant bacterial species. The question arises whether additional pathogen diagnostics using molecular methods provide additional benefits for diagnostics and therapy. Experimental 16S rRNA gene analysis with next-generation sequencing (NGS) and bioinformatics was used to identify the microbiome of the pus in patients with severe odontogenic infections and was compared to the result of standard diagnostic culture. The pus microbiome was determined in 48 hospitalized patients with a severe odontogenic abscess in addition to standard cultural pathogen detection. Cultural detection was possible in 41 (85.42%) of 48 patients, while a pus-microbiome could be determined in all cases. The microbiomes showed polymicrobial infections in 46 (95.83%) cases, while the picture of a mono-infection occurred only twice (4.17%). In most cases, a predominantly anaerobic spectrum with an abundance of bacteria was found in the pus-microbiome, while culture detected mainly Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, and Prevotella spp. The determination of the microbiome of odontogenic abscesses clearly shows a higher number of bacteria and a significantly higher proportion of anaerobes than classical cultural methods. The 16S rRNA gene analysis detects considerably more bacteria than conventional cultural methods, even in culture-negative samples. Molecular methods should be implemented as standards in medical microbiology diagnostics, particularly for the detection of polymicrobial infections with a predominance of anaerobic bacteria.

Highlights

  • Odontogenic infections are among the most common inflammatory diseases in the head and neck region [1,2]. These infections lead to abscesses, which can usually be treated by incision and drainage and, if necessary, by concomitant antibiotic therapy [3]

  • In extensive infections, cultural pathogen diagnostics are performed to enable targeted antibiotic treatment according to an antibiotic susceptibility profile, especially if the initial therapeutic interventions are not optimally effective [7]

  • Concerning microbiological pathogen diagnostics, it can be stated that bacterial culture faces limitations based on pre-analytics, methodology, and pathogen specifications and, in many cases, probably represents only a tiny part of reality

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Summary

Introduction

Odontogenic infections are among the most common inflammatory diseases in the head and neck region [1,2] These infections lead to abscesses, which can usually be treated by incision and drainage and, if necessary, by concomitant antibiotic therapy [3]. The spectrum of these infections ranges from minor abscesses in the oral cavity, which can be treated in the dental practice, to extensive and sometimes life-threatening abscesses of the entire head and neck region, which require hospital treatment under general anesthesia and can even lead to death [4,5]. In extensive infections, cultural pathogen diagnostics are performed to enable targeted antibiotic treatment according to an antibiotic susceptibility profile, especially if the initial therapeutic interventions are not optimally effective [7]

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