Abstract
Abstract Introduction/Objective CAP accounts for approximately 124,000 pediatric hospitalizations annually. Those patients often have received antibiotics prior to admission. Many have concurrent viral infections. Bacterial infections accompanying viral respiratory infections are known to increase morbidity and mortality. Traditional bacterial culture methods are often negative because of previous antibiotic therapy. The BCID, a multiplex polymerase chain reaction(PCR) assay, can identify 19 bacterial pathogens in approximately 90 minutes. It is FDA approved for blood culture isolates. We hypothesized it would detect bacterial pathogens in pleural effusions. Methods BCID panels were done on residual pleural fluid samples from 10 patients with severe community acquired pneumonia during the period 5/2018 – 12/2019. The patients had positive radiographic findings of pneumonia, were inpatients, had intact immune systems by clinical history and had received antibiotic therapy for more than 8 hours before specimen collection. Treatment required 133 inpatient days. 6 of 10 were diagnosed with viral respiratory pathogens. 1 of 9 had a positive blood culture. 1 of 10 had a positive pleural fluid culture. Results 10 of 10 pleural fluid specimens were positive for a pathogen on the BCID panel – 8, Streptococcus pneumoniae, 1, Staphylococcus aureus and I, Streptococcus pyogens. Two of ten had confirmatory positive cultures. Also, one pleural fluid gram stain showed gram positive cocci in chains and clusters. The BCID detected Streptococcus pyogens. Anti Streptolysin O was strongly positive, 964(0 – 70) IU/mL. Conclusion The yield of bacterial culture plummets with previous antibiotic treatment. FDA approved multiplex PCR panels have narrowly defined specimen requirements. That increases the cost and decreases test applicability. Despite a history of appropriate immunizations in the sample population Streptococcus pneumoniae may be prevalent in the complex pediatric pneumonia population. The BCID may be effective at pathogen detection in cases of complex pneumonia where patients have received prior antibiotic treatment.
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