| Literature DB >> 26719443 |
Matthew L Faron1, Blake W Buchan2, Chiara Vismara3, Carla Lacchini3, Alessandra Bielli3, Giovanni Gesu3, Theo Liebregts4, Anita van Bree4, Arjan Jansz4, Genevieve Soucy5, John Korver6, Nathan A Ledeboer7.
Abstract
Recently, systems have been developed to create total laboratory automation for clinical microbiology. These systems allow for the automation of specimen processing, specimen incubation, and imaging of bacterial growth. In this study, we used the WASPLab to validate software that discriminates and segregates positive and negative chromogenic methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) plates by recognition of pigmented colonies. A total of 57,690 swabs submitted for MRSA screening were enrolled in the study. Four sites enrolled specimens following their standard of care. Chromogenic agar used at these sites included MRSASelect (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Redmond, WA), chromID MRSA (bioMérieux, Marcy l'Etoile, France), and CHROMagar MRSA (BD Diagnostics, Sparks, MD). Specimens were plated and incubated using the WASPLab. The digital camera took images at 0 and 16 to 24 h and the WASPLab software determined the presence of positive colonies based on a hue, saturation, and value (HSV) score. If the HSV score fell within a defined threshold, the plate was called positive. The performance of the digital analysis was compared to manual reading. Overall, the digital software had a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 90.7% with the specificity ranging between 90.0 and 96.0 across all sites. The results were similar using the three different agars with a sensitivity of 100% and specificity ranging between 90.7 and 92.4%. These data demonstrate that automated digital analysis can be used to accurately sort positive from negative chromogenic agar cultures regardless of the pigmentation produced.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26719443 PMCID: PMC4767952 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.02778-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948
FIG 1HSV color space, where H (hue) represents the type of color, S (saturation) represents the intensity of the color, and V (value) represents the brightness of the color. The “bubble” is the visual representation of the threshold volume in this three-dimensional space.
FIG 2Representative examples of chromogenic media generated by WASPLab imaging. (A) Negative chromogenic plate containing no growth; (B) positive chromogenic plate containing MRSA; (C) a chromogenic plate with non-MRSA growth, small white colonies.
Performance of WASPLab digital imaging compared to manual reading
| Clinical test site | No. of specimens tested | Results (no.) | Performance (% [95% CI]) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MP/AP | MN/AN | MN/AP | MP/AN | Sensitivity | Specificity | ||
| 1 | 5,604 | 119 | 5,266 | 219 | 0 | 100 (96–100) | 96.0 (95–96) |
| 2 | 41,064 | 680 | 36,333 | 4,051 | 0 | 100 (99–100) | 90.0 (89–90) |
| 3 | 2,217 | 162 | 1,898 | 157 | 0 | 100 (97–100) | 92.4 (91–93) |
| 4 | 8,805 | 406 | 7,616 | 783 | 0 | 100 (99–100) | 90.7 (90–91) |
| Total | 57,690 | 1,367 | 51,113 | 5,210 | 0 | 100 (99–100) | 90.7 (90–91) |
MP/AP, manual positive/automation positive; MN/AN, manual negative/automation negative; MN/AP, manual negative/automation positive; MP/AN, manual positive/automation negative.
CI, confidence interval.
FIG 3Representative examples of manual-negative automation-positive plates generated by WASPLab CDM software. (A1 and A2) Automation-positive 2nd manual-positive plate showing a small colony not visually detected by manual examination but accurately identified as positive by the CDM. (B) Residual matrix on the plate showing lack of growth, but containing color due to the presence of specimen matrix. (C1 and C2) Borderline color plate demonstrating similar color colonies.
Discrepant analysis of manual negative/automation positive plates
| Discrepant category | No. of plates |
|---|---|
| MN/AP | 5,210 |
| Automation positive 2nd manual positive | 153 |
| Residual matrix | 1,189 |
| Borderline colors | 3,868 |
Manual negative/automation positive.
Comparison of 3 chromogenic agars for the detection of MRSA
| Chromogenic medium | No. of specimens tested | Results (no.) | Performance (% [95% CI]) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MP/AP | MN/AN | MN/AP | MP/AN | Sensitivity | Specificity | ||
| MRSASelect | 46,668 | 799 | 41,599 | 4,270 | 0 | 100 (99–100) | 90.7 (90–91) |
| chromID MRSA | 2,217 | 162 | 1,898 | 157 | 0 | 100 (97–100) | 92.4 (91–93) |
| BD Chromagar MRSA | 8,805 | 406 | 7,616 | 783 | 0 | 100 (99–100) | 90.7 (90–91) |
MP/AP, manual positive/automation positive; MN/AN, manual negative/automation negative; MN/AP, manual negative/automation positive; MP/AN, manual positive/automation negative.
CI, confidence interval.