在大型儿科队列中进行金氏菌PCR:对诊断、抗菌药物管理和临床结果的影响。

IF 5.4 2区 医学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
Sophonie Jean Oyeniran, Amy L Leber, Huanyu Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

金氏菌是一种与骨和关节感染相关的细菌病原体,也是儿童人群,特别是≤5岁儿童的主要病原体。与培养方法相比,分子检测方法的灵敏度显着提高,可以快速准确地进行鉴定。本研究的目的是表征内部K. kingae PCR (KKIN PCR)的性能,并确定其对儿科人群抗菌药物使用和临床管理的影响。回顾2014年9月1日至2024年1月31日的实验室记录,以确定在全国儿童医院进行KKIN PCR检测的≤18岁的受试者。分析了人口统计学、症状、放射学和实验室检查结果、住院情况、抗菌药物治疗和临床结果。在研究期间,500名排序KKIN PCR的独特受试者有完整的数据,其中46名通过PCR或培养检测到金氏金氏菌。与临床诊断相比,KKIN PCR的敏感性为95.7,特异性为100,阳性预测值为100,阴性预测值为99.6%。36例(80%)受试者仅通过PCR检测,与培养相比,病例识别率提高了4倍(n = 9)。在≤5岁的被试中,检出的病原菌最多的是K. kingae。KKIN PCR结果的中位时间为26.5 h, 38名(84%)受试者在KKIN PCR报告后1天内进行了抗菌修饰,导致抗菌水平降低或优化。本研究表明,常规使用内部KKIN PCR可显著提高儿童骨关节感染的诊断,促进及时和有针对性的治疗,并改善管理。kingella kingae (KKIN)一直被认为是学龄前儿童骨骼和关节感染的主要原因。然而,由于培养恢复不良,KKIN感染的诊断和患病率被低估。先前的研究表明,与培养相比,基于分子的方法可以提高KKIN的检测,但这些方法并未广泛实施或常规用于临床微生物学实验室。本研究描述了近10年来,在一个大型儿科队列中,内部实验室开发的KKIN PCR的性能和临床应用。除了证明与培养相比,KKIN检测得到了改进之外,它还表明,与以前的报告相比,内部KKIN PCR的快速可用性有助于及时减少抗菌药物的使用,并可能缩短住院时间。这项研究强调了一个关键的诊断差距,可以通过实验室开发的有效PCR来改善KKIN感染的诊断和管理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An in-house Kingella kingae PCR in a large pediatric cohort: impact on diagnosis, antimicrobial stewardship, and clinical outcomes.

Kingella kingae is a bacterial pathogen associated with bone and joint infections and a major pathogen in pediatric populations, particularly in those ≤5 years of age. Molecular detection methods have demonstrated significant increases in sensitivity compared to culture, allowing rapid and accurate identification. The objective of this study was to characterize the performance of an in-house K. kingae PCR (KKIN PCR) and determine its impact on antimicrobial utilization and clinical management in a pediatric population. Laboratory records from 1 September 2014 to 31 January 2024 were reviewed to identify subjects ≤18 years old who had KKIN PCR testing performed at Nationwide Children's Hospital. Demographics, symptoms, radiologic and laboratory findings, hospitalization status, antimicrobial therapy, and clinical outcomes were analyzed. During the study period, 500 unique subjects with KKIN PCR ordered had complete data available, among whom 46 had K. kingae detected by PCR or culture. Compared to the clinical diagnosis, KKIN PCR had sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of 95.7, 100, 100, and 99.6%, respectively. Thirty-six (80%) subjects were detected by PCR alone, improving case identification by fourfold compared to culture (n = 9). Among subjects ≤5 years old, K. kingae was the most common organism detected. The median time to result for KKIN PCR was 26.5 h, and 38 (84%) subjects had antimicrobial modifications within 1 day of KKIN PCR report, resulting in de-escalation or antimicrobial optimization. This study demonstrates that routine use of in-house KKIN PCR significantly increased the diagnosis, facilitated timely and targeted treatment, and improved management of pediatric bone and joint infections.IMPORTANCEKingella kingae (KKIN) has long been recognized as a major cause of bone and joint infections in pre-school aged children. However, diagnosis and prevalence of KKIN infection are underestimated due to poor culture recovery. Previous studies have shown that molecular-based methods improve KKIN detection compared to culture, but these methods are not widely implemented or routinely used in clinical microbiology laboratories. This study describes the performance and clinical utility of an in-house laboratory-developed KKIN PCR in a large pediatric cohort over a nearly 10-year period. In addition to demonstrating improved KKIN detection compared to culture, it also shows that rapid availability of in-house KKIN PCR facilitated timely antimicrobial de-escalation and potentially contributed to shortened hospital length of stay compared to previous reports. This study highlights a critical diagnostic gap that can be alleviated with a validated laboratory-developed PCR to improve diagnosis and management of KKIN infections.

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来源期刊
Journal of Clinical Microbiology
Journal of Clinical Microbiology 医学-微生物学
CiteScore
17.10
自引率
4.30%
发文量
347
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Clinical Microbiology® disseminates the latest research concerning the laboratory diagnosis of human and animal infections, along with the laboratory's role in epidemiology and the management of infectious diseases.
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