Abstract

Chronic respiratory tract infection by Pseudomonas aeruginosa is the hallmark of established lung disease in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). Antibiotic therapy can usually only suppress but not eradicate infection. In recent years, pulmonary infection with non-tuberculous Mycobacteria (NTM) species has also been increasing. These patients are often colonised with multiple isolates and determination of clinical significance of each isolate is difficult. The clinical value of frequent routine susceptibility testing of individual isolates is unproven, particularly since a delay in susceptibility testing is inevitable when purification of multiple cultured isolates is required to test each isolate separately. From August 2019 until December 2020 we ceased routine susceptibility testing on P.aeruginosa respiratory tract isolates from patients with CF if a previous isolate from the patient had susceptibility testing performed. We found that the proportion of P.aeruginosa isolates that had susceptibility testing performed dropped from 97% to 11% as a result of this change in laboratory process. During this time, we also ceased routine culture for acid-fast bacilli if this had been performed within the previous 6 months. We present the cost and resource savings for these changes in laboratory process and assess for clinical impact measured as hospital admissions, length of stay in hospital and mortality.

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