Abstract

BackgroundTo help combat the worldwide spread of multidrug‐resistant Enterobacterales, which are responsible for many causes of urinary tract infection (UTI), we evaluated the ability of the Atellica UAS800 automated microscopy system, the only one offering the capability of bacterial morphological differentiation, to determine its effectiveness.MethodsWe examined 118 outpatient spot urine samples in which pyuria and bacteriuria were observed using flow cytometry (training set: 81; cross‐validation set: 37). The ability of the Atellica UAS800 to differentiate between bacilli and cocci was verified. To improve its ability, multiple logistic regression analysis was used to construct a prediction formula.ResultsThis instrument's detection sensitivity was 106 CFU/ml, and reproducibility in that range was good, but data reliability for the number of cocci was low. Multiple logistic regression analysis with each explanatory variable (14 items from the Atellica UAS800, age and sex) showed the best prediction formula for discrimination of uropathogen morphology was a model with 5 explanatory variables: number of bacilli (p < 0.001), squamous epithelial cells (p = 0.004), age (p = 0.039), number of cocci (p = 0.107), and erythrocytes (p = 0.111). For a predicted cutoff value of 0.449, sensitivity was 0.879 and specificity was 0.854. In the cross‐validation set, sensitivity was 0.813 and specificity was 0.857.ConclusionsThe Atellica UAS800 could detect squamous epithelial cells, an indicator of vaginal contamination, with high sensitivity, which further improved performance. Simultaneous use of this probability prediction formula with urinalysis results may facilitate real‐time prediction of uropathogens and vaginal contamination, thus providing helpful information for empiric therapy.

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