Abstract

Prompt clinical diagnosis and initiation of treatment are critical in the management of infectious endophthalmitis. Current methods used to identify causative agents of infectious endophthalmitis are mostly inefficient, owing to suboptimal sensitivity, length, and cost. Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) can be used to rapidly identity pathogens without a need for culture. Similarly, automated antimicrobial susceptibility test systems (AST, VITEK 2) provide accurate antimicrobial susceptibility profiles. In this proof-of-concept study, we apply these technologies for the direct identification and characterization of pathogens in vitreous samples, without culture, as an in vitro model of infectious endophthalmitis. Vitreous humor aspirated from freshly enucleated porcine eyes was inoculated with different inocula of Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) and incubated at 37°C. Vitreous endophthalmitis samples were centrifuged and pellets were directly analyzed with MALDI-TOF MS and VITEK 2 without prior culture. S. aureus colonies that were conventionally grown on culture medium were used as control samples. Time-to-identification, minimum concentration of bacteria required for identification, and accuracy of results compared to standard methods were determined. MALDI-TOF MS achieved accurate pathogen identification from direct analysis of intraocular samples with confidence values of up to 99.9%. Time from sample processing to pathogen identification was <30 minutes. The minimum number of bacteria needed for positive identification was 7.889x106 colony forming units (cfu/μl). Direct analysis of intraocular samples with VITEK 2 gave AST profiles that were up to 94.4% identical to the positive control S. aureus analyzed per standard protocol. Our findings demonstrate that the direct analysis of vitreous samples with MALDI-TOF MS and VITEK 2 without prior culture could serve as new, improved methods for rapid, accurate pathogen identification and targeted treatment design in infectious endophthalmitis. In vivo models and standardized comparisons against other microbiological methods are needed to determine the value of direct analysis of intraocular samples from infectious endophthalmitis with MALDI-TOF MS and VITEK 2.

Highlights

  • Infectious endophthalmitis is a serious intraocular infection that can lead to rapid irreversible visual loss despite aggressive medical and surgical management

  • Direct analysis of intraocular samples with VITEK 2 gave antimicrobial susceptibility test (AST) profiles that were up to 94.4% identical to the positive control S. aureus analyzed per standard protocol

  • Our findings demonstrate that the direct analysis of vitreous samples with MALDI-TOF MS and VITEK 2 without prior culture could serve as new, improved methods for rapid, accurate pathogen identification and targeted treatment design in infectious endophthalmitis

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious endophthalmitis is a serious intraocular infection that can lead to rapid irreversible visual loss despite aggressive medical and surgical management. It is caused by the replication of bacterial, mycobacterial, or fungal agents in the intraocular chambers, and can occur in the setting of surgery, intraocular injections, trauma, contiguous spread from adjacent structures, and endogenous spread through bloodstream sources[1,2]. The clinical diagnosis of endophthalmitis incorporates microbiological techniques to determine the causative pathogen to optimize treatment strategy. Reported rates for positive cultures that result from vitrectomy samples ranges widely, from 44.6 to 90% of cases, but this range is further complicated by the fact that broad-spectrum intravitreal antibiotics are commonly administered prior to vitrectomy and can prevent the successful identification of intraocular pathogens[4,6]

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