1. Liquid and dry swabs for culture- and PCR-based detection of colonization with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus during admission screening
- Author
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Elizabeth M. Marlowe, Oliver Liesenfeld, N. von Allmen, A. Knaust, M. Njoya, K. Gorzelniak, B. Hoppe, T. Hartel, John Duncan, and M. Walter
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Veterinary medicine ,dry swab ,030106 microbiology ,MRSA ,medicine.disease_cause ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,law ,medicine ,Colonization ,MSwab ,Polymerase chain reaction ,chromogenic culture ,GeneXpert MTB/RIF ,ESwab ,business.industry ,Chromogenic ,screening ,Gold standard (test) ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Original Research Paper ,PCR ,030104 developmental biology ,Specimen collection ,business - Abstract
Rapid detection of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) colonization status facilitates isolation and decolonization and reduces MRSA infections. Liquid but not dry swabs allow fully automated detection methods. However, the accuracy of culture and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using liquid and dry swabs has not been analyzed. We compared different swab collection systems for routine nasal–throat MRSA screening in patients admitted to a tertiary care trauma center in Germany. Over 3 consecutive months, dry swabs (month 1), ESwabs (month 2), or MSwabs (month 3) were processed using Cepheid GeneXpert, Roche cobas and BD-MAX™ MRSA tests compared to chromogenic culture. Among 1680 subjects, the MRSA detection rate using PCR methods did not differ significantly between dry swabs, ESwab, and MSwab (6.0%, 6.2%, and 5.3%, respectively). Detection rates using chromogenic culture were 2.9%, 3.9%, and 1.9%, using dry, ESwab, and MSwab, respectively. Using chromogenic culture as the “gold standard”, negative predictive values for the PCR tests ranged from 99.2–100%, and positive predictive values from 33.3–54.8%. Thus, efficient and accurate MRSA screening can be achieved using dry, as well as liquid E- or MSwab, collection systems. Specimen collection using ESwab or MSwab facilitates efficient processing for chromogenic culture in full laboratory automation while also allowing molecular testing in automated PCR systems.
- Published
- 2019
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