Abstract

BackgroundCulturing has long been the gold standard for detecting aetiologic agents in bacterial infections. In some cases, however, culturing fails to detect the infection. To further investigate culture-negative samples, amplification and subsequent sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene is often applied. The aim of the present study was to compare the current method used at our Department of Clinical Microbiology, based on the MicroSeq ID system (Applied Biosystems, USA) with the Universal Microbe Detection (UMD) SelectNA kit (Molzym, Germany).Methods76 culture-negative samples were first processed with the MicroSeq ID analysis, where total DNA was extracted and the 16S gene amplified and sequenced with the MicroSeq ID system. Samples were subsequently processed with the UMD SelectNA analysis, where human DNA was removed during the DNA extraction procedure and the 16S gene amplified in a real-time PCR and sequenced.Results22 of 76 samples (28.9%) were positive for bacteria with the UMD SelectNA, which was significantly more (p = 0.0055) than the MicroSeq ID where 11 of 76 samples (14.5%) were positive. The UMD SelectNA assay identified more relevant bacterial pathogens than the MicroSeq ID analysis (p = 0.0233), but also found a number of species that were considered contaminations.ConclusionsThe UMD SelectNA assay was valuable for the identification of pathogens in culture-negative samples; however, due to the sensitive nature of the assay, extreme care is suggested in order to avoid false positives.

Highlights

  • Culturing has long been the gold standard for detecting aetiologic agents in bacterial infections

  • The standard method used in clinical microbiology laboratories for detection of bacterial and fungal pathogens is culturing of clinical specimens obtained from the patients

  • The aim of this study was to compare the MicroSeq ID analysis with the Universal Microbe Detection (UMD) SelectNA assay for the detection and identification of pathogens in culture-negative samples for routine diagnostic purposes

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Summary

Introduction

Culturing has long been the gold standard for detecting aetiologic agents in bacterial infections. In some cases culturing fails to detect the infection. To further investigate culture-negative samples, amplification and subsequent sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene is often applied. The aim of the present study was to compare the current method used at our Department of Clinical Microbiology, based on the MicroSeq ID system (Applied Biosystems, USA) with the Universal Microbe Detection (UMD) SelectNA kit (Molzym, Germany). The standard method used in clinical microbiology laboratories for detection of bacterial and fungal pathogens is culturing of clinical specimens obtained from the patients. In some infectious episodes, the causative microorganism cannot be detected by culturing, even though the clinical signs and symptoms are suggestive of an infection. The occurrence of culturenegative results, when microorganisms are

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