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2070. Antibiotic Therapy Effects on Enterobacteriaceae Detection Directly from Blood: Pilot Study Implications for Future Clinical Trial Design

BACKGROUND: Detection of bacteremia directly from blood may improve time to clinical diagnosis and initiation of appropriate antibiotic therapy for hospitalized patients. Administration of empiric antibiotic therapy, whether prior to standard of care (SOC) or research study blood collection, adds to...

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Autores principales: Irwin, Amy, Giddins, Sara, Yushkevich, Irina, Jeffers, Alexiss, Barron, Michelle, Madinger, Nancy, Fuchs, Martin, Kim, Sungho, Metzger, Steven, Price, Connie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6253853/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1726
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author Irwin, Amy
Giddins, Sara
Yushkevich, Irina
Jeffers, Alexiss
Barron, Michelle
Madinger, Nancy
Fuchs, Martin
Kim, Sungho
Metzger, Steven
Price, Connie
author_facet Irwin, Amy
Giddins, Sara
Yushkevich, Irina
Jeffers, Alexiss
Barron, Michelle
Madinger, Nancy
Fuchs, Martin
Kim, Sungho
Metzger, Steven
Price, Connie
author_sort Irwin, Amy
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Detection of bacteremia directly from blood may improve time to clinical diagnosis and initiation of appropriate antibiotic therapy for hospitalized patients. Administration of empiric antibiotic therapy, whether prior to standard of care (SOC) or research study blood collection, adds to challenges in bacterial recovery. Strategies to improve detection were explored in this pilot study to inform future clinical trial design (CTD) on Enterobacteriaceae (ENT) detection directly from blood. One of the objectives was to assess effects of prior antibiotic administration on novel assay performance. METHODS: Confirmed ENT bacteremic (Protocol A (P-A), n = 26), and suspected bacteremic (Protocol B (P-B), n = 25) participants were enrolled into one of two IRB approved protocols after obtaining informed consent. Fresh whole blood (20 mL) was collected within 12 hours of SOC blood culture positivity (P-A) or 20 hours of SOC blood culture collection (P-B), and divided: 10 mL inoculated into a lytic media collection vessel (P-A and B); and 10 mL into a BD BACTEC™ Bottle (P-A) as a control, or an Isolator™ lysis centrifugation tube (P-B) for quantification. For collection vessels, a 3-hour amplification step in lytic growth medium followed by cleanup and concentration steps was employed. Processed samples were tested using an investigational assay for universal bacterial detection on the Accelerate Pheno™ system. Results were analyzed manually and with proprietary software. Descriptive statistics were performed to inform future CTD. RESULTS: Empiric antibiotic therapy was initiated prior to blood collection in 89% (P-A) and 36% (P-B) of participants. Improved detection sensitivity was achieved in P-B over P-A, when a study sample was obtained prior to empiric antibiotic therapy initiation (Table 1). [Image: see text] CONCLUSION: Prior antibiotic administration and low bacterial load in clinical samples affects ability to detect ENT directly from blood. Multiple factors are critical to address in future CTD to increase sensitivity of detecting ENT directly from blood including: (1) Targeting study samples prior to antibiotic therapy initiation and (2) Using enzymatic methods to neutralize antibiotics present in the blood. DISCLOSURES: M. Fuchs, Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc.: Employee, Salary. S. Kim, Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc.: Employee, Salary. S. Metzger, NIH: Grant Investigator, Grant recipient. Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc.: Employee, Salary.
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spelling pubmed-62538532018-11-28 2070. Antibiotic Therapy Effects on Enterobacteriaceae Detection Directly from Blood: Pilot Study Implications for Future Clinical Trial Design Irwin, Amy Giddins, Sara Yushkevich, Irina Jeffers, Alexiss Barron, Michelle Madinger, Nancy Fuchs, Martin Kim, Sungho Metzger, Steven Price, Connie Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Detection of bacteremia directly from blood may improve time to clinical diagnosis and initiation of appropriate antibiotic therapy for hospitalized patients. Administration of empiric antibiotic therapy, whether prior to standard of care (SOC) or research study blood collection, adds to challenges in bacterial recovery. Strategies to improve detection were explored in this pilot study to inform future clinical trial design (CTD) on Enterobacteriaceae (ENT) detection directly from blood. One of the objectives was to assess effects of prior antibiotic administration on novel assay performance. METHODS: Confirmed ENT bacteremic (Protocol A (P-A), n = 26), and suspected bacteremic (Protocol B (P-B), n = 25) participants were enrolled into one of two IRB approved protocols after obtaining informed consent. Fresh whole blood (20 mL) was collected within 12 hours of SOC blood culture positivity (P-A) or 20 hours of SOC blood culture collection (P-B), and divided: 10 mL inoculated into a lytic media collection vessel (P-A and B); and 10 mL into a BD BACTEC™ Bottle (P-A) as a control, or an Isolator™ lysis centrifugation tube (P-B) for quantification. For collection vessels, a 3-hour amplification step in lytic growth medium followed by cleanup and concentration steps was employed. Processed samples were tested using an investigational assay for universal bacterial detection on the Accelerate Pheno™ system. Results were analyzed manually and with proprietary software. Descriptive statistics were performed to inform future CTD. RESULTS: Empiric antibiotic therapy was initiated prior to blood collection in 89% (P-A) and 36% (P-B) of participants. Improved detection sensitivity was achieved in P-B over P-A, when a study sample was obtained prior to empiric antibiotic therapy initiation (Table 1). [Image: see text] CONCLUSION: Prior antibiotic administration and low bacterial load in clinical samples affects ability to detect ENT directly from blood. Multiple factors are critical to address in future CTD to increase sensitivity of detecting ENT directly from blood including: (1) Targeting study samples prior to antibiotic therapy initiation and (2) Using enzymatic methods to neutralize antibiotics present in the blood. DISCLOSURES: M. Fuchs, Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc.: Employee, Salary. S. Kim, Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc.: Employee, Salary. S. Metzger, NIH: Grant Investigator, Grant recipient. Accelerate Diagnostics, Inc.: Employee, Salary. Oxford University Press 2018-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6253853/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1726 Text en © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Irwin, Amy
Giddins, Sara
Yushkevich, Irina
Jeffers, Alexiss
Barron, Michelle
Madinger, Nancy
Fuchs, Martin
Kim, Sungho
Metzger, Steven
Price, Connie
2070. Antibiotic Therapy Effects on Enterobacteriaceae Detection Directly from Blood: Pilot Study Implications for Future Clinical Trial Design
title 2070. Antibiotic Therapy Effects on Enterobacteriaceae Detection Directly from Blood: Pilot Study Implications for Future Clinical Trial Design
title_full 2070. Antibiotic Therapy Effects on Enterobacteriaceae Detection Directly from Blood: Pilot Study Implications for Future Clinical Trial Design
title_fullStr 2070. Antibiotic Therapy Effects on Enterobacteriaceae Detection Directly from Blood: Pilot Study Implications for Future Clinical Trial Design
title_full_unstemmed 2070. Antibiotic Therapy Effects on Enterobacteriaceae Detection Directly from Blood: Pilot Study Implications for Future Clinical Trial Design
title_short 2070. Antibiotic Therapy Effects on Enterobacteriaceae Detection Directly from Blood: Pilot Study Implications for Future Clinical Trial Design
title_sort 2070. antibiotic therapy effects on enterobacteriaceae detection directly from blood: pilot study implications for future clinical trial design
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6253853/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.1726
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