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Multiplex PCR To Diagnose Bloodstream Infections in Patients Admitted from the Emergency Department with Sepsis

Authors :
Jennifer C. van Velkinburgh
Vance G. Fowler
Christopher W. Woods
Emanuel P. Rivers
L. B. Caram
Oliver Liesenfeld
Tahaniyat Lalani
Lynette Waring
Raymond J. Langley
Seth W. Glickman
Charles B. Cairns
Ephraim L. Tsalik
Bradly P. Nicholson
Ronny M. Otero
Lawrence P. Park
Stephen F. Kingsmore
Daphne C Jones
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University Libraries, 2010.

Abstract

Sepsis is caused by a heterogeneous group of infectious etiologies. Early diagnosis and the provision of appropriate antimicrobial therapy correlate with positive clinical outcomes. Current microbiological techniques are limited in their diagnostic capacities and timeliness. Multiplex PCR has the potential to rapidly identify bloodstream infections and fill this diagnostic gap. We identified patients from two large academic hospital emergency departments with suspected sepsis. The results of a multiplex PCR that could detect 25 bacterial and fungal pathogens were compared to those of blood culture. The results were analyzed with respect to the likelihood of infection, sepsis severity, the site of infection, and the effect of prior antibiotic therapy. We enrolled 306 subjects with suspected sepsis. Of these, 43 were later determined not to have infectious etiologies. Of the remaining 263 subjects, 70% had sepsis, 16% had severe sepsis, and 14% had septic shock. The majority had a definite infection (41.5%) or a probable infection (30.7%). Blood culture and PCR performed similarly with samples from patients with clinically defined infections (areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves, 0.64 and 0.60, respectively). However, blood culture identified more cases of septicemia than PCR among patients with an identified infectious etiology (66 and 46, respectively; P = 0.0004). The two tests performed similarly when the results were stratified by sepsis severity or infection site. Blood culture tended to detect infections more frequently among patients who had previously received antibiotics ( P = 0.06). Conversely, PCR identified an additional 24 organisms that blood culture failed to detect. Real-time multiplex PCR has the potential to serve as an adjunct to conventional blood culture, adding diagnostic yield and shortening the time to pathogen identification.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4b76b1725172c1c0c73f9321292078b3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17615/drhc-0m16