| Literature DB >> 30942570 |
Kai Yang1,2, Hong-Zhe Li1,2, Xuan Zhu3, Jian-Qiang Su1, Bin Ren4, Yong-Guan Zhu1,5, Li Cui1.
Abstract
Speeding up antibiotic susceptibility testing (AST) is urgently needed in clincial settings to guide fast and tailored antibiotic prescription before treatment. It remains a big challenge to achieve a sample-to-AST answer within a half working day directly from a clinical sample. Here we develop single-cell Raman spectroscopy coupled with heavy water labeling (Raman-D2O) as a rapid activity-based AST approach directly applicable for clinical urine samples. By rapidly transferring (15 min) bacteria in clinical urine for AST, the total assay time from receiving urine to binary susceptibility/resistance (S/R) readout was shortened to only 2.5 h. Moreover, by overcoming the nonsynchronous responses between microbial activity and microbial growth, together with setting a new S/R cutoff value based on relative C-D ratios, S/R of both pathogenic isolates and three clinical urines against antibiotics of different action mechanisms determined by Raman-D2O were all consistent with the slow standard AST assay used in clincial settings. This work promotes clinical practicability and faciliates antibiotic stewardship.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30942570 DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b01064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Chem ISSN: 0003-2700 Impact factor: 6.986