| Literature DB >> 27974890 |
Jean Pierre Rutanga1, Therese Nyirahabimana1.
Abstract
Bacterial bloodstream infection (bBSI) represents any form of invasiveness of the blood circulatory system caused by bacteria and can lead to death among critically ill patients. Thus, there is a need for rapid and accurate diagnosis and treatment of patients with septicemia. So far, different molecular diagnostic tools have been developed. The majority of these tools focus on amplification based techniques such as polymerase chain reaction (PCR) which allows the detection of nucleic acids (both DNA and small RNAs) that are specific to bacterial species and sequencing or nucleic acid hybridization that allows the detection of bacteria in order to reduce delay of appropriate antibiotic therapy. However, there is still a need to improve sensitivity of most molecular techniques to enhance their accuracy and allow exact and on time antibiotic therapy treatment. In this regard, we conducted a systematic review of the existing studies conducted in molecular diagnosis of bBSIs, with the main aim of reporting on clinical significance and benefits of molecular diagnosis to patients. We searched both Google Scholar and PubMed. In total, eighteen reviewed papers indicate that shift from conventional diagnostic methods to molecular tools is needed and would lead to accurate diagnosis and treatment of bBSI.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27974890 PMCID: PMC5128711 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6412085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interdiscip Perspect Infect Dis ISSN: 1687-708X
Figure 1Flow diagram of paper selection.
Summary of papers included in this review.
| First author | Year of publication | Study period | Study country | Age range | Sample size | Patient's setting | Type of diagnostic tool | Design | Cases with bBSIs | Performance | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Faria | 2015 | Not stated | Canada | Adult | Not stated | Hospital based | Illumina sequencing following PCR amplification of 16S rDNA | Lysis of cells followed by DNA extraction | Not stated | High but not specified | Molecular profiling is more accurate than blood culture |
| Jordana-Lluch | 2014 | 2012-2013 | Spain | Not stated | Not stated | Review type of study | PCR/ESI-MS | Use of amplicons | Not stated | Sensitivity 75%, specificity 92% | This molecular technique provides fast diagnosis of clinical samples |
| Venkatesh [ | 2010 | Not stated | USA | Neonatal | Not stated | Hospital, ICU | Microarray and PCR | Detection of organism by hybridization and amplification | Not stated | Sensitivity of 98.7%, specificity of 99% for microarray, sensitivity and specificity of 86.4 and 99.0%, respectively, for PCR | These methods are more feasible compared to BC |
| Warhurst | 2015 | Not stated | UK | Not stated | Not stated | Review study | SeptiFast real-time PCR | Not stated | Not stated | 60.8% sensitivity, 86.3% specificity | PCR-based assays are more specific but suffer from low sensitivity values |
| Carrara | 2013 | 4/2011–9/2011 | Spain | Not stated | 267 | Hospital, ICU | Multiplex PCR assay, the Magicplex Sepsis Test | Not stated | 98 | Sensitivity 65% (52–76%), specificity 92% (87–95%) | Can detect even fastidious bacteria but still needs some improvement to increase sensitivity |
| Ecker | 2010 | Not stated | USA | Both adult and children | Not stated | Not stated | PCR-ESI/MALDI-TOF/PCR-EIA | Sample extraction, lysis and enrichment with reagent | Not stated | Sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values were 95.0, 98.8, 95.0, and 98.8%, respectively | They are more accurate, sensitive, and fast compared to blood culture |
| Boyd | 2014 | 2011–2013 | Canada | Not stated | 245 | Not stated | Multiplex PCR | Use of 16RNA for bacterial identification | Not stated | High specificity but low sensitivity | The use of molecular techniques will improve life in septic patients |
| Lecuit | 2014 | Not stated | France | Not stated | Not stated | Review study | Multiplex PCR | Bacterial typing is done by detecting conserved 16S rRNA regions | Not stated | 95% sensitivity, 92% specificity | Further optimization of multiplex PCR is recommended |
| Reddy [ | 2010 | Not stated | Tanzania, Malawi, and Kenya | Adults and infants | 221 | Hospital based | PCR | Not stated | 136 | Moderate | Ease of identifying bacterial etiologies |
| Lehmann | 2008 | Not stated | Germany | Not stated | 574 | Healthy volunteers | Multiplex real-time PCR | Compare PCR amplicons to the conserved regions | Not stated | Higher performance than blood culture | PCR-based techniques chosen for their sensitivity and specificity |
| Wallet | 2010 | Not stated | France | Not stated | Not stated | Hospital, ICU | LightCycler-SeptiFast (LC-SF) | Not stated | Not stated | Sensitive at 78%, specific at 99% | LC-SF is of valuable interest for patients with sepsis |
| Bacconi | 2014 | Not stated | Maryland | Not stated | 331 | Hospital samples | PCR/EI-MS | Cells are lysed and followed by DNA extraction by an automated instrument | 35 | 83% sensitivity, 94% specificity | Rapid detection and identification of microbes |
| Tennant | 2015 | Not stated | Pakistan/Karachi | Adult | Not stated | Hospital samples | q-PCR | Not stated | Not stated | 40% sensitivity, >90% specificity | Use of multiple methodologies to increase accuracy |
| Wang | 2014 | Not stated | Republic of Korea | Both adult and children | Not stated | Hospital, ICU | The real-time PCR TaqMan assay | DNA extraction from a colony of blood culture | Not sated | Sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 89.5% | Molecular techniques are more specific than BC |
| Chang | 2013 | 2011–2013 | USA | Adult | 34 | Review type of study | LC-SF, multiplex real-time PCR | Not stated | 18 | High specificity and moderate sensitivity | LC-SF multiplex real-time PCR gives more promising results than BC |
| Liesenfeld | 2014 | Not stated | USA | Not stated | Not sated | Review type of study | Emphasis on commercially available molecular techniques | Not stated | Not stated | The most reported one is the PCR of 84% sensitivity and 94% specificity | Molecular methods have advantages in microbial identification, but they must be refined in a good algorithm |
| Dark | 2011 | Not stated | UK | Adult | 600 | Hospital, ICU | Multiplex real-time PCR | BC followed by DNA extraction and PCR | Not stated | 95% specific and 87% sensitive | PCR-based techniques are better than blood culture when it comes to assay time, sensitivity, and specificity values |
| Jordana-Lluch | 2015 | 2012–2014 | Spain | Not stated | 410 | Hospital based | Multiplex PCR | Automated DNA extraction followed by PCR | Not stated | Sensitivity of 76.9% and specificity of 87.2% | A promising technology to detect a wide range of bacterial microbes |