Diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practice

Background and Aim: Empirical antimicrobial therapy is frequently given in superficial bacterial folliculitis (SBF) and otitis externa (OE) in dogs, especially for the initial clinical presentation. Culture and subsequent antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) are generally limited to chronic ca...

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Main Authors: Roberta Perego, Eva Spada, Piera Anna Martino, Daniela Proverbio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Veterinary World 2020-03-01
Series:Veterinary World
Subjects:
dog
Online Access:http://www.veterinaryworld.org/Vol.13/March-2020/19.pdf
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spelling doaj-87018a5d3213496bb9871a9415ec962c2021-08-02T12:16:09ZengVeterinary WorldVeterinary World0972-89882231-09162020-03-0113352152910.14202/vetworld.2020.521-529Diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practiceRoberta Perego0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8241-907XEva Spada1Piera Anna Martino2Daniela Proverbio3Department of Veterinary Medicine (DIMEVET), University of Milan, via dell'Università 6, 26900 Lodi, Italy.Department of Veterinary Medicine (DIMEVET), University of Milan, via dell'Università 6, 26900 Lodi, Italy.Department of Veterinary Medicine (DIMEVET), University of Milan, via dell'Università 6, 26900 Lodi, Italy.Department of Veterinary Medicine (DIMEVET), University of Milan, via dell'Università 6, 26900 Lodi, Italy.Background and Aim: Empirical antimicrobial therapy is frequently given in superficial bacterial folliculitis (SBF) and otitis externa (OE) in dogs, especially for the initial clinical presentation. Culture and subsequent antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) are generally limited to chronic cases with poor response to initial therapy. Several factors contribute to the failure to implement the use of AST in veterinary practice, i.e., long laboratory turnaround time or special requirements for sample shipping. Point-of-care (PoC) testing might reduce laboratory turnaround time and costs and the risk of emergence of multidrug-resistant pathogens. This study evaluated the Speed Biogram™ PoC test in canine SBF and OE compared with conventional methods for culture and AST. Materials and Methods: Thirty-four canine samples were analyzed: eleven from SBF, seven from bacterial OE, four from mixed OE, six from Malassezia spp. OE, and six negative controls. Sensitivity (Se) and specificity (Sp) of the PoC test and the agreement between the PoC test and conventional methods were evaluated. Results: Se and Sp of PoC test in discriminating between healthy and unhealthy subjects were 100% (95% confidence interval [CI] 87.66-100.00) and 100% (95% CI 54.1-100.0), respectively. For bacterial identification, the k value was 0.532. Se and Sp of PoC tests for AST were 81.73% (95% CI 72.95-88.63) and 93.10% (95% CI 88.86-96.98), respectively with a total good agreement between tests (mean k=0.714), but major (8/27) and very major (19/27) errors were observed in 55% of bacterial conventional culture-positive samples. Conclusion: PoC test can identify dogs with SBF and OE, but AST is not sufficiently accurate. The lack of susceptibility testing for methicillin makes this test inappropriate for use in small animal practice.http://www.veterinaryworld.org/Vol.13/March-2020/19.pdfantimicrobial susceptibility testdogotitis externapoint-of-care testsuperficial bacterial folliculitis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roberta Perego
Eva Spada
Piera Anna Martino
Daniela Proverbio
spellingShingle Roberta Perego
Eva Spada
Piera Anna Martino
Daniela Proverbio
Diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practice
Veterinary World
antimicrobial susceptibility test
dog
otitis externa
point-of-care test
superficial bacterial folliculitis
author_facet Roberta Perego
Eva Spada
Piera Anna Martino
Daniela Proverbio
author_sort Roberta Perego
title Diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practice
title_short Diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practice
title_full Diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practice
title_fullStr Diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practice
title_full_unstemmed Diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practice
title_sort diagnostic evaluation of a point-of-care test for culture and microbial susceptibility testing in canine dermatological infections in clinical practice
publisher Veterinary World
series Veterinary World
issn 0972-8988
2231-0916
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Background and Aim: Empirical antimicrobial therapy is frequently given in superficial bacterial folliculitis (SBF) and otitis externa (OE) in dogs, especially for the initial clinical presentation. Culture and subsequent antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) are generally limited to chronic cases with poor response to initial therapy. Several factors contribute to the failure to implement the use of AST in veterinary practice, i.e., long laboratory turnaround time or special requirements for sample shipping. Point-of-care (PoC) testing might reduce laboratory turnaround time and costs and the risk of emergence of multidrug-resistant pathogens. This study evaluated the Speed Biogram™ PoC test in canine SBF and OE compared with conventional methods for culture and AST. Materials and Methods: Thirty-four canine samples were analyzed: eleven from SBF, seven from bacterial OE, four from mixed OE, six from Malassezia spp. OE, and six negative controls. Sensitivity (Se) and specificity (Sp) of the PoC test and the agreement between the PoC test and conventional methods were evaluated. Results: Se and Sp of PoC test in discriminating between healthy and unhealthy subjects were 100% (95% confidence interval [CI] 87.66-100.00) and 100% (95% CI 54.1-100.0), respectively. For bacterial identification, the k value was 0.532. Se and Sp of PoC tests for AST were 81.73% (95% CI 72.95-88.63) and 93.10% (95% CI 88.86-96.98), respectively with a total good agreement between tests (mean k=0.714), but major (8/27) and very major (19/27) errors were observed in 55% of bacterial conventional culture-positive samples. Conclusion: PoC test can identify dogs with SBF and OE, but AST is not sufficiently accurate. The lack of susceptibility testing for methicillin makes this test inappropriate for use in small animal practice.
topic antimicrobial susceptibility test
dog
otitis externa
point-of-care test
superficial bacterial folliculitis
url http://www.veterinaryworld.org/Vol.13/March-2020/19.pdf
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