Evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.

BACKGROUND: Treatment of septic shock relies on appropriate antimicrobial therapy. Current culture based methods deliver final results after days, which may delay potentially lifesaving adjustments in antimicrobial therapy. This study was undertaken to compare PCR with blood culture results under ro...

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Main Authors: Frank Bloos, Svea Sachse, Andreas Kortgen, Mathias W Pletz, Marc Lehmann, Eberhard Straube, Niels C Riedemann, Konrad Reinhart, Michael Bauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3459981?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-8e39763cfd0044438478b85ed8cc72c92020-11-24T21:17:51ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0179e4600310.1371/journal.pone.0046003Evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.Frank BloosSvea SachseAndreas KortgenMathias W PletzMarc LehmannEberhard StraubeNiels C RiedemannKonrad ReinhartMichael BauerBACKGROUND: Treatment of septic shock relies on appropriate antimicrobial therapy. Current culture based methods deliver final results after days, which may delay potentially lifesaving adjustments in antimicrobial therapy. This study was undertaken to compare PCR with blood culture results under routine conditions regarding 1. impact on antimicrobial therapy, and 2. time to result, in patients with presumed sepsis. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: This was an observational study in a 50 beds ICU of a university hospital. In 245 patients with suspected sepsis, 311 concomitant blood cultures and blood for multiplex PCR (VYOO(®)) were obtained. 45 of 311 blood cultures (14.5%) and 94 of 311 PCRs (30.1%) were positive. However, blood culture or microbiological sampling from the presumed site of infection rarely confirmed PCR results and vice versa. Median time to positivity and interquartile range were 24.2 (18.0, 27.5) hours for the PCR and 68 (52.2, 88.5) hours for BC (p<0.01). PCR median time to result was dependent on technician availability (53.5 hours on Saturdays, 7.2 hours under optimal logistic conditions). PCR results showed good correlation with procalcitonin (p<0.001). In 34% of patients with positive PCRs antimicrobial therapy was considered inadequate according to assessment of clinical arbitrators including 5 patients with vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), 3 cases with multiresistant staphylococci, and 4 patients with fungi. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this observational study support the hypothesis that PCR results are available faster, are more frequently positive, and may result in earlier adjustment of antimicrobial therapy. However, shorter time to result can only be fully exploited when the laboratory is adequately staffed for a 24 hour/7 day service, or when point of care/automated assay systems become available.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3459981?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frank Bloos
Svea Sachse
Andreas Kortgen
Mathias W Pletz
Marc Lehmann
Eberhard Straube
Niels C Riedemann
Konrad Reinhart
Michael Bauer
spellingShingle Frank Bloos
Svea Sachse
Andreas Kortgen
Mathias W Pletz
Marc Lehmann
Eberhard Straube
Niels C Riedemann
Konrad Reinhart
Michael Bauer
Evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Frank Bloos
Svea Sachse
Andreas Kortgen
Mathias W Pletz
Marc Lehmann
Eberhard Straube
Niels C Riedemann
Konrad Reinhart
Michael Bauer
author_sort Frank Bloos
title Evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.
title_short Evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.
title_full Evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.
title_fullStr Evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.
title_sort evaluation of a polymerase chain reaction assay for pathogen detection in septic patients under routine condition: an observational study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Treatment of septic shock relies on appropriate antimicrobial therapy. Current culture based methods deliver final results after days, which may delay potentially lifesaving adjustments in antimicrobial therapy. This study was undertaken to compare PCR with blood culture results under routine conditions regarding 1. impact on antimicrobial therapy, and 2. time to result, in patients with presumed sepsis. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: This was an observational study in a 50 beds ICU of a university hospital. In 245 patients with suspected sepsis, 311 concomitant blood cultures and blood for multiplex PCR (VYOO(®)) were obtained. 45 of 311 blood cultures (14.5%) and 94 of 311 PCRs (30.1%) were positive. However, blood culture or microbiological sampling from the presumed site of infection rarely confirmed PCR results and vice versa. Median time to positivity and interquartile range were 24.2 (18.0, 27.5) hours for the PCR and 68 (52.2, 88.5) hours for BC (p<0.01). PCR median time to result was dependent on technician availability (53.5 hours on Saturdays, 7.2 hours under optimal logistic conditions). PCR results showed good correlation with procalcitonin (p<0.001). In 34% of patients with positive PCRs antimicrobial therapy was considered inadequate according to assessment of clinical arbitrators including 5 patients with vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), 3 cases with multiresistant staphylococci, and 4 patients with fungi. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this observational study support the hypothesis that PCR results are available faster, are more frequently positive, and may result in earlier adjustment of antimicrobial therapy. However, shorter time to result can only be fully exploited when the laboratory is adequately staffed for a 24 hour/7 day service, or when point of care/automated assay systems become available.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3459981?pdf=render
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