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Revolutionising Bacteriology to Improve Treatment Outcomes and Antibiotic Stewardship

Laboratory investigation of bacterial infections generally takes two days: one to grow the bacteria and another to identify them and to test their susceptibility. Meanwhile the patient is treated empirically, based on likely pathogens and local resistance rates. Many patients are over-treated to pre...

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Autores principales: Livermore, David M, Wain, John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Korean Society of Infectious Diseases and Korean Society for Chemotherapy 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3780945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24265945
http://dx.doi.org/10.3947/ic.2013.45.1.1
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author Livermore, David M
Wain, John
author_facet Livermore, David M
Wain, John
author_sort Livermore, David M
collection PubMed
description Laboratory investigation of bacterial infections generally takes two days: one to grow the bacteria and another to identify them and to test their susceptibility. Meanwhile the patient is treated empirically, based on likely pathogens and local resistance rates. Many patients are over-treated to prevent under-treatment of a few, compromising antibiotic stewardship. Molecular diagnostics have potential to improve this situation by accelerating precise diagnoses and the early refinement of antibiotic therapy. They include: (i) the use of 'biomarkers' to swiftly distinguish patients with bacterial infection, and (ii) molecular bacteriology to identify pathogens and their resistance genes in clinical specimens, without culture. Biomarker interest centres on procalcitonin, which has given good results particularly for pneumonias, though broader biomarker arrays may prove superior in the future. PCRs already are widely used to diagnose a few infections (e.g. tuberculosis) whilst multiplexes are becoming available for bacteraemia, pneumonia and gastrointestinal infection. These detect likely pathogens, but are not comprehensive, particularly for resistance genes; there is also the challenge of linking pathogens and resistance genes when multiple organisms are present in a sample. Next-generation sequencing offers more comprehensive profiling, but obstacles include sensitivity when the bacterial load is low, as in bacteraemia, and the imperfect correlation of genotype and phenotype. In short, rapid molecular bacteriology presents great potential to improve patient treatments and antibiotic stewardship but faces many technical challenges; moreover it runs counter to the current nostrum of defining resistance in pharmacodynamic terms, rather than by the presence of a mechanism, and the policy of centralising bacteriology services.
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spelling pubmed-37809452013-11-21 Revolutionising Bacteriology to Improve Treatment Outcomes and Antibiotic Stewardship Livermore, David M Wain, John Infect Chemother Review Article Laboratory investigation of bacterial infections generally takes two days: one to grow the bacteria and another to identify them and to test their susceptibility. Meanwhile the patient is treated empirically, based on likely pathogens and local resistance rates. Many patients are over-treated to prevent under-treatment of a few, compromising antibiotic stewardship. Molecular diagnostics have potential to improve this situation by accelerating precise diagnoses and the early refinement of antibiotic therapy. They include: (i) the use of 'biomarkers' to swiftly distinguish patients with bacterial infection, and (ii) molecular bacteriology to identify pathogens and their resistance genes in clinical specimens, without culture. Biomarker interest centres on procalcitonin, which has given good results particularly for pneumonias, though broader biomarker arrays may prove superior in the future. PCRs already are widely used to diagnose a few infections (e.g. tuberculosis) whilst multiplexes are becoming available for bacteraemia, pneumonia and gastrointestinal infection. These detect likely pathogens, but are not comprehensive, particularly for resistance genes; there is also the challenge of linking pathogens and resistance genes when multiple organisms are present in a sample. Next-generation sequencing offers more comprehensive profiling, but obstacles include sensitivity when the bacterial load is low, as in bacteraemia, and the imperfect correlation of genotype and phenotype. In short, rapid molecular bacteriology presents great potential to improve patient treatments and antibiotic stewardship but faces many technical challenges; moreover it runs counter to the current nostrum of defining resistance in pharmacodynamic terms, rather than by the presence of a mechanism, and the policy of centralising bacteriology services. The Korean Society of Infectious Diseases and Korean Society for Chemotherapy 2013-03 2013-03-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3780945/ /pubmed/24265945 http://dx.doi.org/10.3947/ic.2013.45.1.1 Text en Copyright © 2013 by The Korean Society of Infectious Diseases and Korean Society for Chemotherapy http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Livermore, David M
Wain, John
Revolutionising Bacteriology to Improve Treatment Outcomes and Antibiotic Stewardship
title Revolutionising Bacteriology to Improve Treatment Outcomes and Antibiotic Stewardship
title_full Revolutionising Bacteriology to Improve Treatment Outcomes and Antibiotic Stewardship
title_fullStr Revolutionising Bacteriology to Improve Treatment Outcomes and Antibiotic Stewardship
title_full_unstemmed Revolutionising Bacteriology to Improve Treatment Outcomes and Antibiotic Stewardship
title_short Revolutionising Bacteriology to Improve Treatment Outcomes and Antibiotic Stewardship
title_sort revolutionising bacteriology to improve treatment outcomes and antibiotic stewardship
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3780945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24265945
http://dx.doi.org/10.3947/ic.2013.45.1.1
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