Combined selective culture and molecular methods for the detection of carbapenem-resistant organisms from fecal specimens

The objective of this work was to further develop and compare methods that combine selective culture and/or PCR to rapidly detect and recover CRO from fecal specimens. Molecularly characterized Gram-negative bacilli (n = 62) were used to spike fecal samples to establish limit of detection (LOD; n = 12), sensitivity (n = 28), and specificity (n= 21) for 3 methods to detect CP-CRO: direct MacConkey (MAC) plate and Xpert Carba-R (Cepheid) on growth, MAC broth and Carba-R testing of the broth, and direct testing by Carba-R. This was followed by a clinical study comparing methods in parallel for 286 fecal specimens. The LOD ranged from 102-105 CFU/mL depending on the carbapenemase gene and method. Combined culture/PCR methods had a sensitivity of 100%, whereas direct Carba-R testing had a sensitivity of 96% for the detection of CP-CRO. All methods had specificities of 100%. The prevalence of CP-CRO (0.7%) and non-CP-CRO (5.2 %) were low in the clinical study, where all methods demonstrated 100% agreement. The three methods performed comparably in detecting CP-CRO. Direct Carba-R testing had a higher LOD than the combined selective culture methods, but this may be offset by its rapid turnaround time for detection of CP-CRO. The selective culture methods provide the benefit of simultaneously isolating CP-CRO in culture for follow-up testing and detecting non-CP-CRO.
Source: European Journal of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases - Category: Microbiology Source Type: research