An Evaluation of a Syndromic Molecular Panel in Optimising the Microbiological Diagnosis and Antimicrobial Therapy of Suspected Osteoarticular Infections in Paediatric Patients.
Marilena Agosta, Venere Cortazzo, Manuela Onori, Barbara Lucignano, Gianluca Vrenna, Martina Rossitto, Maria Del Carmen Pereyra Boza, Valeria Fox, Marco Roversi, Antonio Musolino, Andrzej Krzysztofiak, Laura Lancella, Marco Giordano, Francesco Falciglia, Ottavia Porzio, Alberto Villani, Carlo Federico Perno, Paola Bernaschi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Paediatric osteoarticular infections (POAIs) present unique diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. Microbiological culture (MC) is typically time-consuming and lacks sensitivity, especially when patients have received antibiotics. The BIOFIRE® Joint Infection Panel (BJIP) is a syndromic molecular assay for the direct identification of most pathogens causing POAIs. Methods: We evaluated BJIP in 17 synovial fluids, and then, we retrospectively assessed its utility in 93 off-label specimens (i.e., 25 purulent fluids/biopsies and 68 whole blood samples). All specimens were collected from October 2022 to March 2024 from paediatric patients admitted at the Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital in Rome. Results: A bacterial pathogen was isolated in only one of 17 synovial fluid cultures, while BJIP identified eight additional microorganisms in MC-negative cases. The most frequently detected pathogen was S. aureus (44.5%, 4/9). BJIP performance in synovial fluids showed an overall positive percentage agreement (PPA) and negative percentage agreement (NPA) of 100% and 88.1%, respectively, compared to MC. All positive results (n/N = 9/17) were considered medically significant, with an increase in NPA to 100%. In purulent fluids/biopsies, BJIP and MC were concordant in 72% of cases (n/N = 18/25), with a per-sample PPA and NPA of 90% and 60%, respectively. For whole blood samples, almost all samples were negative by both methods (i.e., reference blood culture and BJIP), and the molecular test did not enable any further microbiological diagnosis. Conclusions: The BIOFIRE® Joint Infection Panel rapidly and accurately enabled or excluded a diagnosis of a POAI (~1 vs. 24-96 h for MC), optimising antimicrobial therapy.
背景/目的:儿童骨关节感染(POAIs)呈现出独特的诊断和治疗挑战。微生物培养(MC)通常耗时且缺乏敏感性,特别是当患者接受抗生素治疗时。BIOFIRE®联合感染面板(BJIP)是一种综合征分子检测方法,可直接识别大多数导致POAIs的病原体。方法:我们在17种滑液中评估了BJIP,然后,我们回顾性地评估了它在93个非标签样本(即25个化脓性液体/活检和68个全血样本)中的应用。所有标本均于2022年10月至2024年3月从罗马Bambino Gesù儿童医院收治的儿科患者中采集。结果:在17例滑液培养物中仅分离出一种细菌病原体,而BJIP在mc阴性病例中鉴定出8种额外的微生物。检出最多的病原菌为金黄色葡萄球菌(44.5%,4/9)。与MC相比,BJIP在滑液中的表现分别显示出100%和88.1%的总体阳性百分比一致性(PPA)和阴性百分比一致性(NPA)。所有阳性结果(n/ n = 9/17)都被认为具有医学意义,NPA增加到100%。在化脓性液体/活检中,72%的病例(n/ n = 18/25) BJIP和MC一致,每个样本的PPA和NPA分别为90%和60%。对于全血样本,几乎所有样本通过两种方法(即参考血培养和BJIP)均为阴性,并且分子检测无法进行任何进一步的微生物诊断。结论:BIOFIRE®联合感染小组快速准确地启用或排除POAI的诊断(~1对24-96小时的MC),优化抗菌治疗。
DiagnosticsBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Clinical Biochemistry
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
2699
审稿时长
19.64 days
期刊介绍:
Diagnostics (ISSN 2075-4418) is an international scholarly open access journal on medical diagnostics. It publishes original research articles, reviews, communications and short notes on the research and development of medical diagnostics. There is no restriction on the length of the papers. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical research in as much detail as possible. Full experimental and/or methodological details must be provided for research articles.