| Literature DB >> 35744706 |
Romain Lotte1,2,3, Audrey Courdurié4, Alice Gaudart1, Audrey Emery1, Alicia Chevalier1,2,3, Albert Tran2,3,5, Mathilde Payen1,2,3, Raymond Ruimy1,2,3.
Abstract
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is a severe infection that requires fast and accurate antibiotic therapy to improve the patient outcome. Direct bacterial identification using MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry from ascitic fluid inoculated in blood culture bottles (BCBs) could therefore improve patients' management. We evaluated the impact of the implementation of this method for the treatment of patients. Our identification protocol was performed on 136 positive BCBs collected from 61 patients between December 2018 and December 2020. The therapeutic impact of our protocol was evaluated using a before (2015-2016) and after (2019-2020) case-control study in two populations of 41 patients diagnosed with SBP and treated with antibiotics. The decrease in time to first identification and the optimization of antibiotic therapy following communication of the identification result were evaluated. Our protocol allowed us to identify 78% of bacteria in ascitic fluids. The transmission of the direct identification allowed the introduction or adaption of the antibiotic therapy early in 37% of SBP, with a mean decrease in time to first antibiotic change of 17 h. Our direct identification protocol for positive inoculated ascitic fluids is fast, reliable and inexpensive. Its routine integration into a microbiology laboratory allows the early introduction of appropriate antibiotic therapy and improves the management of patients with SBP.Entities:
Keywords: MALDI-TOF; ascites; direct identification of bacteria
Year: 2022 PMID: 35744706 PMCID: PMC9228703 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10061188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Figure 1Schematic representation of the comparative study of “before” and “after” direct MALDI-TOF on positive BCBs.
Direct bacterial identifications on ascitic fluid on Day0 by type of bacteria (log(score) ≥ 1.5) *.
| Groups | Total No. | No. Concordant | % Concordant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gram-positive bacteria | 98 | 71 | 73% |
| Gram-negative bacteria | 58 | 50 | 86% |
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| 9 | 9 | 100% |
| Coagulase-negative Staphylococci | 37 | 26 | 70% |
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| Streptococci | 13 | 5 | 39% |
| Enterococci | 25 | 21 | 84% |
| Other Gram-positive cocci 1 | 4 | 2 | 50% |
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| 44 | 40 | 91% |
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| 9 | 5 | 56% |
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| 3 | 3 | 100% |
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| Aerobic Gram-positive bacilli 2 | 8 | 7 | 88% |
| Anaerobic Gram-positive bacilli 3 | 2 | 1 | 50% |
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| 2 | 2 | 100% |
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* 1 (Aerococcus urinae, Anaerococcus murdochii, Rothia mucilaginosa), 2 (Listeria monocytogenes, Corynebacterium sp., Bacillus cereus), 3 (Propionibacterium acnes, Clostridium tertium). * Discordant identifications were caused by direct identification failures. Misidentifications were only reported for S. mitis group species as previously shown [9,10,11,12].
Before-and-after comparative analysis: spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
| Before Period | After Period | Statistical Analysis (+) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 41 | 41 | |
| Sex ratio (male/female) | 33/8 | 28/13 | |
| Age | 65 +/− 11 | 62 +/− 11 | |
| Monomicrobial samples | 37/41 | 37/3 | |
| Polymicrobial samples | 4/41 | 4/41 | |
| Mean time for bacterial growth in BCBs | 26.4 | 25.6 | |
| Enterobacteriacae | 17/45 | 17/45 | |
| 18/45 | 14/45 | ||
| 5/45 | 7/44 | ||
| Non-fermenting | 3/45 | 3/45 | |
| Anaerobic bacteria | 1/45 | 2/45 | |
| Other bacteria | 1/45 | 2/45 | |
| Total % of change in antibiotic treatment | 15/41 (37%) | 15/41 (37%) | |
| % change in antibiotic treatment at first result at Day 0 on BCBs | 6/41 (15%) | 15/41 (37%) | |
| Mean time to first change in antibiotic (hours) | 41.3 | 24.3 |
(+) The unpaired student’s t-test was used to compare the quantitative variable, i.e., (age and mean time to first antibiotic change) and the chi-square test was used to compare the categorical variable, i.e., (sex ratio and % of antibiotic change).
Clinical and microbiologic features of patients with SBP.
| Patient | Gender | Age | Clinical Features | First Antibiotic | Leukocyte Count (Cells/mm3) | GRAM on Positive BCBs (D0) | Identification | Time to First Change in Antibiotic (Hours) | Antibiotic Optimization | Identification | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Male | 58 | SBP in a patient with ethylic liver cirrhosis | Tazocillin | 11,900 | Gram-positive rod |
| 20 | Amoxicillin |
| Favorable evolution after 10 days of amoxicillin |
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| Female | 75 | SBP in a patient with HCV-related liver cirrhosis | Amoxicillin and clavulanic acid | 400 | Gram-negative rod |
| 24 | Cefepime and metronidazole | Not favorable after 5 days of cefepime and metronidazole switched for imipenem. | |
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| Male | 83 | SBP | Cefotaxime | 315 | Gram-positive cocci in chain |
| 18.5 | Amoxicillin |
| Favorable evolution after 10 days of amoxicillin |
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| Male | 77 | SBP | Cefotaxime | 5940 | Gram-positive cocci in chain |
| 20 | Amoxicillin |
| Favorable evolution after 10 days of amoxicillin |
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| Female | 67 | SBP in a patient with endometrial cancer | Tazocillin | 2700 | Gram-negative bacilli |
| 18.5 | Cefepime |
| Favorable evolution after 7 days of cefepime |
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| Male | 67 | SBP in a patient with ethylic liver cirrhosis | Tazocillin | 270 | Gram-negative bacilli |
| 24 | Cefotaxime |
| Favorable evolution after 4 days of cefotaxime followed by a oral amoxicillin and clavulanic acid for a total of 7 days |
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| Female | 85 | SBP in a patient with secondary liver involvement by lymphoma | No antibiotic | 250 | Gram-positive cocci in clusters |
| 22 | Introduction of cefazolin |
| Not favorable. Death 10 days after antibiotic initiation. |
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| Male | 54 | SBP in a patient with ethylic liver cirrhosis and bleedings of varices. Past medical history of SBP caused by | Cefotaxime | 22,140 | Gram-negative bacilli |
| 69 | Addition of metronidazole |
| Not favorable. Recurrence of SBP at 5 days of antibiotic initiation and switched for imipenem |
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| Male | 71 | SBP and sepsis in a patient with ethylic liver cirrhosis. | Imipenem | 1200 | Gram-positive cocci in chains and Gram-negative bacilli | 21.5 | Addition of Daptomycin | Not favorable. Patient died 7 days after appropriate antibiotic treatment | ||
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| Male | 67 | SBP in a patient hospitalized for drainage of refractory ascites caused by | No antibiotic | 315 | Gram-negative bacilli |
| 16 | Initiation of imipenem |
| Not favorable. Death 19 days after antibiotic initiation. |
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| Male | 52 | SBP in a patient hospitalized for hepatocellular carcinoma | Tazocillin | 250 | Gram-positive bacilli |
| 17.5 | Amoxicillin |
| Favorable after 7 days of amoxicillin |
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| Male | 60 | SBP in a patient with peritoneal carcinomatosis and treated by cefoxitine for a PICC line infection | Cefoxitine | 110 | Gram-positive cocci in chain |
| 17 | Amoxicillin |
| Favorable after 7 days of amoxicillin |
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| Male | 57 | SBP in a patient with acute liver failure complicating a primary sclerosing cholangitis | No antibiotic | 210 | Gram-positive cocci in chain |
| 20 | Amoxicillin |
| Favorable after 7 days of amoxicillin |
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| Male | 54 | SBP in a patient with ethylic liver cirrhosis | No antibiotic | 550 | Gram-positive cocci in chain |
| 39 | Tazocillin |
| Favorable after 24 h of tazocillin followed by a total of 10 days of oral amoxicillin |
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| Male | 60 | SBP in a patient with ethylic liver cirrhosis | No antibiotic | 300 | Gram-positive cocci in clusters |
| 17 | Amoxicillin and clavulanic acid |
| Favorable after 10 days of amoxicillin and clavulanic acid |