| Literature DB >> 30641976 |
Peter J Dailey1,2, Jennifer Osborn3, Elizabeth A Ashley4,5, Ellen Jo Baron6, David A B Dance7,8,9, Daniela Fusco10,11, Caterina Fanello12,13, Yukari C Manabe14, Margaret Mokomane15, Paul N Newton16,17,18, Belay Tessema19, Chris Isaacs20, Sabine Dittrich21.
Abstract
Bacterial blood stream infections (BSI) are a common cause of mortality and morbidity globally. As the causative agents and the resulting treatment decisions vary, near-patient testing and surveillance tools are necessary to monitor bacterial causes and resistance to antimicrobial agents. The gold standard to identify BSIs is blood culture (BC), a methodology not widely available in resource-limited settings. The aim of the study was to map out a target product profile of a simplified BC system (SBCS) to inform product development efforts. To identify the desired characteristics of a SBCS, we enlisted a small group of specialists working in Africa and Asia. Questions were used to understand challenges and how these constraints inform system requirements. The specialists were infectious disease physicians, public health/clinical microbiologists, clinical researchers, and technology experts with different geographical backgrounds. All suggested that BC should ideally be available at the district hospital level. Many of the same operational challenges, such as limited availability of culture bottles, electricity and internet connectivity, profuse dust, the lack of ambient temperature control, and human capacity constraints were identified across the different regions. BCs, although the accepted gold standard for diagnosis of BSIs, are not widely available outside of reference/research centers in Africa and Asia. To extend the reach of this important tool, it is crucial to engage product developers and academic research partners to develop accessible alternatives.Entities:
Keywords: AMR; LMICs; blood culture; hemoculture; low- and middle-income countries; microbiology; resource limited; sepsis; target product profile
Year: 2019 PMID: 30641976 PMCID: PMC6468589 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics9010010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Overview of blood culture (BC) methods in use at interviewed sites or representative countries. Only aerobic cultures were performed across all sites, and bottles were incubated for seven days. Costs at interview sites ranged from a cost of $5–7 USD per test and up to $25 USD was reported in one case. All sites currently performing BCs reported that nurses were the primary health providers collecting blood samples, though at some sites physicians (2/4, 50%) and lab technicians (1/4, 25%) also collecting samples. The expertise of the interviewees from the different countries were infectious disease physicians (Lao PDR, Myanmar, Cambodia), public health/clinical microbiologist (Ethiopia, Botswana).
| City, County | Level [ | Current System | Media Preparation | Delayed Entry | QC of Reagents | Reporting Protocol | Identification | AST |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vientiane, Lao PDR | 3–4 | Manual, daily check for turbidity; blood | Local | Sample transport from remote locations, try to receive within 24 hours of collection; transport at RT in a double-skinned insulated metal box | QC for agar made in-house | Gram stain, some rapid dx tests performed and the preliminary result is communicated verbally to clinicians ASAP and updated on a daily basis until there is a written a final report | API® (bioMerieux) | Disk diffusion |
| Multiple, Cambodia | 3 | Manual, daily check for turbidity | Local | Ideally immediate; transport at RT | Central QC for media at manufacturer | Lab to call ward to inform doctor of result | Manual biochemical | Disk diffusion |
| Gondar, Ethiopia | 3–4 | Manual, daily check for turbidity | Local | Ideally immediate, can be small delays; transport at RT | QC on media for sterility | Preliminary reports: growth (turbidity)—report Gram stain preliminary report, and finally drug susceptibility | Gram stain and then biochemical tests for Gram negative organism | Disk diffusion |
| Gaborone, Botswana | 4 | Manual, daily check for turbidity | Procure | Ideally immediate, though delays up to 8 h; transport at RT | QC on media | Positive results reported in Laboratory Information Systems for some facilities; but manual reports are collected by hospital wards daily | Manual biochemical | Disk diffusion |
| Multiple, Myanmar | 3–4 | Majority are manual | Local | Overnight delays > 12 h are common; transport at RT | No | Final report (~7 days) | Manual Biochemical (few level 4 centers are introducing Vitek2) | Disk diffusion (automated methods available for selected patients at very few Level 4 centers) |
ASAP: As soon as possible; dx: Diagnosis; QC: Quality control; RT: Room temperature; AST: Antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
Summary of challenges for performing BC in low-resource settings, based on responses from interviewed specialists in multiple countries. Responses were subjective assessments by the interviewed and are not necessarily transferrable to all settings in the respective country. The following definitions for three colors were used: Green = no challenge, yellow = some challenges, red = significant challenges, white = unsure/question not answered. The expertise of the interviewees from the different countries were infectious disease physicians (Lao PDR, Myanmar, Cambodia), public health/clinical microbiologist (Ethiopia, Botswana, Guinea) and clinical researcher (DR Congo).
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| Country | Available at level | Power | Dust | Lab Temperature control | Humidity | Connectivity | Level of lab staff training | Quality Control for BC | Sample Collection (Volume, training) | Specimen Tracking | Result Reporting | |
| Lao PDR | 3–4 | |||||||||||
| Cambodia | 3 | |||||||||||
| Ethiopia | 3–4 | |||||||||||
| Botswana | 4 | |||||||||||
| Guinea | 4 * | |||||||||||
| Myanmar | 3 | |||||||||||
| DR Congo | 3 | |||||||||||
| Uganda | 3–4 | |||||||||||
* Only urine culture capacity available at the capital. PDR: People’s Democratic Republic, DR: Democratic Republic.
Proposed target product profile for a simplified BC system based on stakeholder input and international guidelines.
| Characteristic | Minimal | Optimal | Additional References |
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| A simplified blood culture system suitable for resource limited settings to support patient management and surveillance activities | ||
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| Total population (including neonates and immunocompromised individuals) presenting with fever | ||
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| Level 3 (Regional/Provincial Hospital) and above | Appropriate for use in level 2 (District Hospital) | [ |
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| Moderately trained lab technicians (e.g., 1–2 year certificates) | Lab technicians with limited training (e.g., 3–6 months, able to operate an integrated test with minimal additional steps) | [ |
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| < US $20,000 | < US $5000 | |
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| < US $10 per test | < US $5 per test | |
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| - Culture positivity, Gram status; | Pathogen identification and antimicrobial susceptibility are automated outputs of the system | |
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| > 95% sensitivity for detection of positive BC for either monomicrobial or polymicrobial | ||
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| Identifies 90% of isolates to species level, 95% genus level | Identifies 95% to species level, 99% to genus level | Standard BC and identification by MALDI-TOF MS is the reference [ |
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| Not able to determine monomicrobial from polymicrobial infections | Able to determine monomicrobial from polymicrobial infections | |
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| Able to provide an accurate result in the presence of malaria infection [ | Able to provide an accurate result in the presence of malaria infection and/or antibiotics [ | |
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| The entire test procedure for system operation after sample collection to result should require a maximum of 2 steps by the user | The entire test procedure for system operation after sample collection to result should require a maximum of 1 step by the user and no additional steps required by user after the sample has been placed into the instrument | [ |
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| - Test consumable (culture bottle) should support smaller volumes (5 mL or less) for pediatric samples and low volume draws; | The same test consumable (culture bottle) should support smaller volumes (5 mL or less) for pediatric samples and low volume draws | International and local guidelines regarding blood volumes and number of samples collected should be followed |
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| - Allows for room temperature storage of BC bottles post collection for <4 h prior to culture; | [ | |
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| Same as standard BC | [ | |
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| Test reports positive or negative culture results | Test reports culture positive and > 95% Gram status and morphology information | |
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| Provides pathogen identification | Provides pathogens identification with resistance categories of interest (MRSA vs. MSSA, ESBL producing Enterobacteriaceae) and CRE | [ |
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| Antimicrobial susceptibility determination requires separate methodologies | Antimicrobial susceptibility is included as an automated output of the test result and therapy recommendations based on local treatment guidelines | |
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| - Alert for preliminary and final report; | Minimal requirements in addition to therapy recommendations based on local treatment guidelines | |
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| None provided | All components required for sample collection are included in the kit | |
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| Only compatible with BC media bottles from the test manufacturer | Compatible with local manufacture of BC media bottles with a specified media formulation | |
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| Compatible with 2D barcodes and labels | Stakeholder interviews | |
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| 6 months at + 5 °C to 35 °C, 70% humidity, including transport stress (48 h at 50 °C); no cold chain required | 12 months at + 5 °C to + 40 °C at 90% humidity & transport stress (72 h at 50 °C); no cold chain required | High environmental temperatures and high humidity is often a problem in many countries. High environmental temperatures and high humidity is often a problem in many countries [ |
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| No cold chain required; tolerance of transport stress for a minimum of 48 h at 5 °C to + 40 °C | No cold chain required; tolerance of transport stress for a minimum of 72 h at 5 °C to + 40 °C | Refrigerated transport is costly and often cannot be guaranteed during the entire transportation process. Frequent delays in transport are commonplace [ |
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| Consumables should be able to be disposed of as biohazardous waste as specified by WHO guidelines according to the safe management of waste from health-care activities or per country regulations | [ | |
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| Same as standard BC in a closed system; | - No need for a biosafety cabinet; basic safety procedures need to be followed (standard PPE); | |
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| - Between + 10 °C to + 35 °C at 70% humidity and at a max altitude of 2000 meters above mean sea level; | - Between + 5 °C to + 40 °C at 90% humidity and at a max altitude of 3000 meters above mean sea level; | High environmental temperatures and high humidity and dust are often an issue in LMICs. High environmental temperatures and high humidity and dust are often an issue in LMICs. |
MALDI-TOF MS: Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry; QC: Quality control; ESBL: Extended spectrum beta-lactamases; MSSA: Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus; MRSA: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; CRE: carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae; WHO: World Health Organization; PPE: Personal protective equipment.