| Literature DB >> 28742143 |
Kayoko Hayakawa1, Kazuhisa Mezaki2, Masao Kobayakawa3, Kei Yamamoto1, Yoshikazu Mutoh1, Motoyuki Tsuboi1, Takehiro Hasimoto1, Maki Nagamatsu1, Satoshi Kutsuna1, Nozomi Takeshita1, Yuichi Katanami1, Masahiro Ishikane1,4, Norio Ohmagari1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rapid identification of positive blood cultures is important for initiation of optimal treatment in septic patients. Effects of automated, microarray-based rapid identification systems on antibiotic prescription against community-onset bacteremia (COB) remain unclear.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28742143 PMCID: PMC5524366 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart of each test and subsequent antibiotic changes.
Comparison of the rates of antibiotic changes after each test.
| Verigene test | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | GP | GN | |
| 51 (27.6%) | 17 (41.5%) | 34 (23.6%) | |
| De-escalation to narrower-spectrum effective antibiotics | 36 (19.5%) | 13 (31.7%) | 23 (16%) |
| Switching to effective antibiotics from ineffective antibiotics | 10 (5.4%) | 3 (7.3%) | 7 (4.9%) |
| 57 (30.8%) | 12 (29.3%) | 45 (31.3%) | |
| De-escalation to narrower-spectrum effective antibiotics | 41 (22.2%) | 9 (22%) | 32 (22.2%) |
| Switching to effective antibiotics from ineffective antibiotics | 1 (0.5%) | 0 | 1 (1.9%) |
| 13 | 4 (9.8%) | 9 (6.3%) | |
| De-escalation to narrower-spectrum effective antibiotics | 11 | 3 (7.3%) | 8 (5.6%) |
| Switching to effective antibiotics from ineffective antibiotics | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Note. Values indicate number (%) [95% confidence interval], unless otherwise indicated.
A The rates of antibiotic change within 2 days of rapid identification by the Verigene system and conventional identification and susceptibility tests.
B Including two episodes in which antibiotics were initiated after the Verigene test results became available.
C Including three episodes (two GPC and one GNR) in which changes were difficult to attribute to either method due to the short period of notification of differences in results.
D Including two episodes (one GPC and one GNR) in which changes were difficult to attribute to either method due to the short period of notification of difference in results.
Abbreviations. GP, gram-positive organisms; GPC, gram-positive cocci; GN, gram-negative organisms; GNR, gram-negative rods; NA, not available.
Performance of Verigene BC-GP and BC-GN for bacteremia evaluation*.
| Gram-positive | Correctly identified/total | Gram-negative | Correctly identified/total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 13/13 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) | ||
| 1/2 (50%) | 6/6 (100%) | ||
| Coagulase-negative | 3/3 (100%) | 4/4 (100%) | |
| 3/3 (100%) | 23/23 (100%) | ||
| 1/1 (100%) | 73/73 (100%) | ||
| 4/4 (100%) | 4/4 (100%) | ||
| 1/1 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) | ||
| 2/2 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) | ||
| 1/1 (100%) | |||
| 9/9 (100%) |
Note. Values indicate number (%) [95% confidence interval], unless otherwise indicated.
* Excluding episodes where multiple organisms were identified for each GP or GN test.
** One isolate was detected as coagulase-negative Staphylococci.
Performance of Verigene BC-GP and BC-GN in multiple organism identification.
| Conventional test results | Verigene test results |
|---|---|
| Coagulase-negative | Coagulase-negative |
| Not detected | |
A Each result included one episode unless otherwise stated.
B Three episodes. In all cases, both detected.
Performance of Verigene BC-GP and BC-GN in resistance detection.
| Conventional test results | Verigene test results | Concordance rate |
|---|---|---|
| MRSA (n = 2) | 100% (22.4–100%) | |
| Methicillin-resistant | 100% (5–100%) | |
| ESBL-producing | CTX-M (+) | 100% (79.4–100%) |
| ESBL-producing | CTX-M (+) | 100% (5–100%) |
Abbreviations. ESBL, extended-spectrum β-lactamase; MRSA, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.