Preliminary reading of antibiogram by microdilution for clinical isolates in urine culture
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Rodríguez Guerrero, Enrique; Moya-López, José; Expósito Ruiz, Manuela; Navarro Marí, José María; Gutiérrez Fernández, JoséEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Urinary tract infection Urine culture MicroScan Walkaway Rapid antibiogram Preliminary reading
Date
2024-01-12Referencia bibliográfica
Rodríguez-Guerrero, E., Moya-López, J., Expósito-Ruiz, M. et al. Preliminary reading of antibiogram by microdilution for clinical isolates in urine culture. Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis 43, 517–524 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10096-024-04747-5
Abstract
Purpose: We evaluated a modification of automated antibiograms in urine cultures designed to facilitate the early interpretation of minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) and accelerate the targeted treatment of urinary tract infections (UTIs), METHODS: A prospective study was conducted of 309 isolates (219 Enterobacteriaceae, 75 Enterococcus spp., and 15 non-fermenting Gram-negative bacilli (NFGNB), and a retrospective study of 9 carbapenemase-producing clinical isolates from urine cultures. Colonies grown on conventional isolation plates were inoculated in MicroScan Walkaway system panels and incubated for 7 h, using a MicroScan AutoScan-4 plate reader for preliminary MIC determination by turbidimetry. Resulting antibiograms were compared with definitive antibiograms obtained after incubation for 17 h.
Results: Preliminary and definitive readings were concordant for 86.7% of Gram-positive cocci isolates (65/75), 61.6% of Enterobacteriaceae (135/219), and 53.3% of NFGNB. The agreement rate was greater than 90% for most antimicrobials against Gram-positive cocci (94.7% or more) and Enterobacteriaceae, (97.2% or more for 10 of 17 antibiotics) except with nitrofurantoin (89%). The agreement rate was 86.7% or more for most antibiotics against NFGNB apart from piperacillin/tazobactam, aztreonam, amikacin, and ciprofloxacin. Gram-negative bacilli showed the highest differences in MIC values between preliminary and definitive readings.
Conclusions: A preliminary antibiogram reading may be useful in urine cultures to reduce the delay before targeted antibiotherapy, especially against Enterobacteriaceae and Gram-positive cocci, but not in cases of carbapenemase-producing NFGNB. Further local studies are warranted to evaluate the usefulness of this approach in relation to resistance rates.