| Literature DB >> 32380973 |
Markos Kalligeros1, Ioannis M Zacharioudakis2, Giannoula S Tansarli1, Katerina Tori1, Fadi Shehadeh1, Eleftherios Mylonakis3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: T2Bacteria assay uses T2 magnetic resonance (T2MR) technology for the rapid diagnosis of bacterial bloodstream infections (BSIs). This FDA cleared technology can detect 5 of the most prevalent pathogens causing bacteremia (Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Enterococcus faecium). Because the significance of discordant results between the T2Bacteria assay and blood culture (BC) remains a challenge, in this case series we reviewed the medical records of patients who had a positive T2Bacteria test and a concurrent negative BC.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteremia; Bloodstream infection; Discordant results; Sepsis; Septicemia; T2 magnetic resonance; T2Bacteria assay; T2MR
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32380973 PMCID: PMC7206677 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-020-05049-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Clinical and laboratory details of patients with probable BSI
| Patient number | Age range, Gender | Brief History of present illness | T2Bacteria result | Other (+) culture with the same T2-detected pathogen within 21 days | Antibiotics used/ Activity against T2 detected bacterium | Radiologic Findings | Discharge Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | > 65, M | Blood Pressure 80/40 mmHg, heart rate 120/min, fever 38.3 °C. Dysuria and urinary frequency for 5 days PTA | Blood cultureb (−2d) Urine culture (−2d) | CRO, TZP/Yes | CT negative for renal obstruction | ESBL | |
| Patient 2 | > 65, F | Fever, chills, nausea, dysuria | Blood cultureb (−1d) Urine culture (−1d) | CRO /Yes | – | Pyelonephritis with | |
| Patient 3 | 50–64, F | Nausea, vomiting, burning with urination, abdominal and flank pain, fever | Urine culture (0d) | CRO, TZP/Yes | – | Pyelonephritis due to | |
| Patient 4 | > 65, F | Chills, rigors, dyspnea, dysuria | Urine culture (0d) | CRO /Yes | CT: bilateral pyelonephritis | Bilateral | |
| Patient 5 | > 65, F | Fever, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and dark foul-smelling urine for 1 week. | Urine culture (−1d) | CRO, TZP /Yes | CT: 4 mm obstructing calculus, mild hydroureteronephrosis | Pyelonephritis due to | |
| Patient 6 | > 65, M | Fever, dysuria and sepsis. | Urine culture (−1d) | CRO /Yes | CT: Right sided Pyelonephritis | Pyelonephritis due to | |
| Patient 7 | > 65, F | Weakness, productive cough, fever, nausea and vomiting. Symptoms started 5 days PTA. | Blood cultureb (−4d) | VAN, CRO, AZM/ Yes | CXR with right lower lobe pneumonia | Influenza B, superimposed | |
| Patient 8 | 50–64, M | Left thigh abscess and sepsis. Had a previous visit for left thigh abscess 1 month ago, which was incised. | Wound incision and drainage culture (−2d) with MRSA | VAN, SAM/Yes | U/S: Subcutaneous edema. No drainable abscess | Left thigh abscess/ MRSA wound infection | |
| Patient 9 | > 65, M | Left third finger abscess and fever for 8 days. Cellulitis/abscess in left third finger. | Blood cultureb (−11d) Finger abscess (−2d) | VAN, TZP/Yes | Finger osteomyelitis, Bacteremia due to | ||
| Patient 10 | 18–49, M | Flank pain, chills, dysuria, hematuria. Initially admitted with obstructing mid ureteral calculus and UTI. Underwent urgent right ureteral stent placement. | Urine culture (−3d) | AMP, CRO /Yes | CT: Multifocal abscess formation in the right kidney | Obstructing mid-ureteral calculus with UTI and multifocal kidney abscesses. | |
| Patient 11 | > 65, M | Fever, shaking chills and nausea. History of recurrent UTIs and benign prostatic hyperplasia requiring self-catheterization with Foley catheter. | Urine culture (−1d) | VAN, TZP/Yes | – | Complicated UTI due to |
aT2Bacteria detected 2 targeted organisms in the sample of this patient. Please also see Table 3. bRefers to a previous blood culture, not the blood culture that was taken at the same time with the T2 blood sample
AMC Amoxicillin-clavulanic, AZM Azithromycin, CFZ Cefazolin, CIP Ciprofloxacin, CRO Ceftriaxone, CT Computed Tomography, F Female, M Male, MEM Meropenem, MRSA Methicillin Resistant S. aureus SAM Ampicillin-Sulbactam, PTA prior to admission, TZM Piperacillin-tazobactam, U/S Ultrasound, UTI Urinary Tract Infection, VAN Vancomycin
Clinical and laboratory details of patients with presumptive false positive results
| Demographics | Age range, Gender | Brief History of present illness | T2Bacteria result | Other (+) culture with other than T2-detected pathogen within 21 days | Antibiotics used/Activity against T2 detected bacterium | Relevant Radiologic Findings | Discharge Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 16 | > 65, F | Nausea, vomiting, imbalance and blurry vision. No signs of infection. A TTE performed on day 4 showed a mobile echo-density on the aortic valve which was consistent with Lambl’s excrescence or vegetation and prompted BCs. | No | None | MRI brain: Large acute infarct in the right cerebral hemisphere. | Stroke | |
| Patient 17 | 50–64, F | Patient with abdominal pain and melena | None | Abdomen CT: pancreatitis with multiple pseudocysts | Alcohol-induced acute pancreatitis with pancreatic pseudocyst. | ||
| Patient 18 | 50–64, M | 2 days PTA patient visited the ED for traumatic shoulder injury and BC was received. Admitted because BC yielded CoNS. | No | None | – | Musculoskeletal shoulder injury | |
| Patient 19 | 18–49, M | HIV positive on HAART treatment. (last CD4 was 450 cells/mm3) presents febrile (up to 38.8 °C) after status epilepticus. | No | CRO, VAN/ No | Normal CT and MRI of the brain | Seizure Disorder | |
| Patient 20 | 18–49, F | 3 days of diffuse body rash, fever (40.4 °C) and headache. | No | FEP, VAN, DOX/ Yes (FEP-96%) | – | Undiagnosed/ Possible Q Fever, Parvovirus B19, Toxoplasmosis | |
| Patient 6 | > 65, M | Fever, dysuria, sepsis | No | CIP/ Yes (CIP-85%) | – | Pyelonephritis |
T2Bacteria detected 2 targeted organisms in the sample of this patient. Please also see Table 1
BC Blood Culture, CIP Ciprofloxacin, CRO Ceftriaxone, CoNS Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus, CX culture, DOX Doxycycline, F Female, FEP Cefepime, HAART Highly active antiretroviral therapy, M Male, MSSA Methicillin susceptible S. aureus, PTA prior to admission, T2/BC T2 sample and the “companion” blood culture, TTE Transthoracic echocardiogram, UCX urine culture, VAN Vancomycin
Clinical and laboratory details of patients with possible BSI
| Demographics | Age range, Gender | Brief History of present illness | T2Bacteria result | Other (+) culture with pathogen different than T2-detected within 21 days | Antibiotics used/Activity against T2 detected bacterium (% susceptibility) | Radiologic Findings | Discharge Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 12 | 18–49, F | Chest pain, fever, hypoxemia, and tachycardia. Active Cocaine/Heroin IV user, HCV, recent dental surgery. | No | VAN, AZM, TZP/ (VAN-100%) | CT: c/w pneumonia. TTE was negative | Pneumonia | |
| Patient 13 | > 65, F | Sudden onset left sided abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting. | No | CIP, MTZ / (CIP-85%) | i) CT (day 1): Acute uncomplicated diverticulitis ii) CT (day 3): Minimally complicated diverticulitis with micro-perforation, as well as new secondary enteritis and small bowel obstruction | Diverticulitis | |
| Patient 14 | 18–49, F | Fever, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting. Diagnosed with breast cancer, on Trastuzumab (had chest port site). | BC from port site yielded CoNS (−1d) (considered contaminant) | VAN, FEP / (FEP-98%) | – | Sepsis without clear source identified | |
| Patient 15 | 18–49, M | Abdominal pain, fever, nausea after appendectomy (Postoperative day 4). Reported a sharp RLQ pain and ecchymosis surrounding his incisions. | Culture of drainage from right lower quadrant collection yielded | TZP / (TZP-91%) | CT: Right lower quadrant collection compatible with a postoperative hematoma with possible superinfection | Infected postoperative hematoma |
AZM Azithromycin, CIP Ciprofloxacin, CFZ Cefazolin, CoNS Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus, CT Computed Tomography, c/w compatible with, F Female, FEP Cefepime, M Male, MEM Meropenem, MTZ Metronidazole, TTE Transthoracic Echocardiogram, TZP Piperacillin-Tazobactam, UTI Urinary tract infection, VAN Vancomycin