| Literature DB >> 31101861 |
Luigi Rosa1, Maria Stefania Lepanto1, Antimo Cutone1, Francesca Berlutti1, Massimiliano De Angelis1, Vincenzo Vullo1, Claudio Maria Mastroianni1, Piera Valenti1, Alessandra Oliva2.
Abstract
To enumerate bacteria adherent to medical devices, Vortex-Sonication-Vortex Method (VSVM) and BioTimer Assay (BTA) have been applied. VSVM counts detached microorganisms whereas BTA enumerates adherent microorganisms through microbial metabolism. However, the limitation of VSVM consists in incomplete detachment of adherent microorganisms while BTA is unable to identify microbial genera and species. Herein, the combined use of VSVM and BTA for the diagnosis and enumeration of adherent microorganisms causing implant-associated-infections (IAIs) is reported. Over 2016-2018, 46 patients with IAIs were enrolled and their 82 explanted devices were submitted firstly to VSVM and then to BTA. VSVM plus BTA detected microorganisms in 39/46 patients (84.7%) compared with 32/46 (69.5%) and 31/46 (67.3%) by VSVM and BTA alone, respectively. Likely, combined methods led to microorganism detection in 54/82 devices (65.9%) compared with each method alone [43/82 (52.4%), 44/82 (53.6%) for VSVM and BTA, respectively]. The combination of both methods (concordance 75.6%) raised the sensitivity of microbial analysis in IAIs compared with either VSVM or BTA alone, thus representing a simple and accurate way for the identification and enumeration of microorganisms adherent on devices. Moreover, BTA reagent applied in a new apparatus allowed also the enumeration of the microorganisms adherent on different segments of cardiac electrodes, thus contributing to define IAIs pathogenesis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31101861 PMCID: PMC6525267 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-44045-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Study population.
| Total patients No. 46 | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| CIED | 23/46 |
| PICC/PORT/CVC | 21/46 |
| US | 2/46 |
|
| 26/46 (56.5%) |
| Lead-associated endocarditis | 5/5 |
| Pocket infections | 0/18 |
| PICC-I/PORT-I/CVC-I | 21/21 |
| US-I | 0/2 |
|
| 20/46 (43.5%) |
| Lead-associated endocarditis | 0/5 |
| Pocket infections | 18/18 |
| PICC-I/PORT-I/CVC-I | 0/21 |
| US-I | 2/2 |
|
| 32/46 (69.5%) |
| Lead-associated endocarditis | 1/5 |
| Pocket infections | 14/18 |
| PICC-I/PORT-I/CVC-I | 17/21 |
| US-I | 0/2 |
|
| 14/46 (30.5%) |
| Lead-associated endocarditis | 4/5 |
| Pocket infections | 4/18 |
| PICC-I/PORT-I/CVC-I | 4/21 |
| US-I | 2/2 |
|
| 31/46 (67.3%) |
| Lead-associated endocarditis | 4/5 |
| Pocket infections | 14/18 |
| PICC-I/PORT-I/CVC-I | 12/21 |
| US-I | 1/2 |
|
| 15/46 (32.7%) |
| Lead-associated endocarditis | 1/5 |
| Pocket infections | 4/18 |
| PICC-I/PORT-I/CVC-I | 9/21 |
| US-I | 1/2 |
|
| 39/46 (84.7%) |
Cardiovascular implantable electronic devices infection (CIED-I); peripherally inserted central catheter infection (PICC-I); port-a-cath infection (PORT-I); central venous catheter infection (CVC-I); ureteral stent infection (US-I); Vortex-Sonication-Vortex method (VSVM); BioTimerAssay (BTA).
Devices collected and analyzed by Vortex-Sonication-Vortex method (VSVM) and BioTimer Assay (BTA).
| Devices collected | Total No. of devices | Positive microbiological diagnosis VSVM plus BTA | Total concordance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 82 | 54/82 (65.9%) | 62/82 (75.6%) | |
| Generators | 16/82 | 12/16 | 13/16 |
| Leads | 42/82 | 21/42 | 34/42 |
| PICCs | 19/82 | 16/19 | 14/19 |
| Port-a-cath | 1/82 | 1/1 | 0/1 |
| CVC | 1/82 | 1/1 | 0/1 |
| USs* | 3/82 | 2/3 | 1/3 |
Leads: atrial or ventricular lead; peripherally inserted central catheters: PICCs; central venous catheter: CVC; ureteral stents: USs.
*One patient had two subsequent US-Is.
Figure 1Enumeration of microorganisms by Vortex-Sonication-Vortex method (blue) and BioTimer Assay (red) colonizing generators (Panel A), leads (Panel B), peripherally inserted central catheters (PICCs) (Panel C), port-a-cath (PORT), central venous catheters (CVCs) and ureteral stents (USs) (Panel D). The sterile devices were omitted from the graphs.
The new analytical apparatus with BTA reagent was used for the detection of the adherent bacteria along different atrial and ventricular lead segments in a 66-years old patient carrying generator, atrial and ventricular leads. The comparative analyses were carried out by VSVM.
| Total CFUs by VSVM | Total equivalent CFUs by BTA | |
|---|---|---|
| Generator | 5.0 × 105 | 5.0 × 106 |
|
| 3.0 × 102 | 2.4 × 104 |
| Proximal segment | / | 2.0 × 104 |
| Middle segment | / | 4.0 × 103 |
| Distal segment | / | 4.0 × 103 |
|
| 2.0 × 105 | 5.0 × 106 |
| Proximal segment | / | 2.0 × 106 |
| Middle segment | / | 1.5 × 106 |
| Distal segment | / | 1.5 × 106 |
Colony Forming Units: CFUs.
Figure 2New analytical apparatus for BioTimer Assay. The compartment 1 was used as sterility control; compartments 2–4 were used for the analysis of atrial or ventricular leads horizontally lodged. Each compartment was isolated with paraffin and filled with Phenol Red and Resazurin Indicators (PhRRIs). In the compartment 2 the proximal segment, in the compartment 3 the middle segment and in the compartment 4 the distal segment of lead were analyzed, respectively. The PhRRIs colour switch, from violet-to-orange, indicated the presence of non-fermenting adherent microorganisms. The number was calculated by using the correlation line showed in Fig. 4.
Figure 4Correlation lines obtained by BioTimer Assay with the reagent containing both Phenol Red and Resazurin Indicators (BTA-PhRRIs) using fermenting (colour switch from violet-to-yellow) and non-fermenting (colour switch from violet-to-orange) microorganisms. The correlation lines show the relationship between the time (X axis) required for colour switch and the initial number of planktonic equivalent microorganisms per milliliter (Y axis).
Figure 3Scanning electron microscopy images showing the different amounts of detached biofilm (Panel A and B) or microorganisms (Panel C) present in the solution after Vortex-Sonication-Vortex method obtained from a representative device.