High-throughput screening of colonization samples for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.

SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES(2013)

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Abstract
Background: We present here the first application of 2-photon excited fluorescence detection (TPX) technology for the direct screening of clinical colonization samples for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Methods: A total of 125 samples from 14 patients with previously identified MRSA carriage and 16 controls from low-prevalence settings were examined. Results: The results were compared to those obtained by both standard phenotypic and molecular methods. In identifying MRSA carriers, i.e. persons with at least 1 MRSA positive colonization sample by standard methods, the sensitivity of the TPX technique was 100%, the specificity 78%, the positive predictive value 75%, and the negative predictive value 100%. The TPX assay sensitivity per colonization sample was 89%, the specificity 93%, the positive predictive value 84%, and the negative predictive value 95%. The median time for a true-positive test result was 3 h and 26 min; negative test results are available after 13 h. The assay capacity was 48 samples per test run. Conclusions: The TPX MRSA technique could provide early preliminary results for clinicians, while simultaneously functioning as a selective enrichment step for further conventional testing. Costs and workload associated with hospital infection control can be reduced using this high-throughput, point-of-care compatible methodology.
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Key words
High-throughput assays,MRSA,susceptibility testing,TPX
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