1. Performances of automated digital imaging of Gram-stained slides with on-screen reading against manual microscopy
- Author
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Gesuele Renzi, Adrien Nicolas Fischer, Nicolas Vuilleumier, Nouria Azam, Lara Rasga, Jacques Schrenzel, Valérie Barras, Abdessalam Cherkaoui, and Manuela Tangomo
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,030106 microbiology ,Manual microscopy ,law.invention ,Automation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,On-screen reading ,law ,Microscopy ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Gram ,ddc:616 ,Bacteria ,Staining and Labeling ,business.industry ,Digital imaging ,Digitalization ,Bacterial Infections ,General Medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,Gram staining ,Gram stain ,Phenazines ,Original Article ,Gentian Violet ,Screen reading ,Automated digital imaging ,Nuclear medicine ,business - Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the performances of the automated digital imaging of Gram-stained slides against manual microscopy. Four hundred forty-three identified Gram-stained slides were included in this study. When both methods agreed, we considered the results as correct, and no further examination was carried out. Whenever the methods gave discrepant results, we reviewed the digital images and the glass slides by manual microscopy to avoid incorrectly read smears. The final result was a consensus of multiple independent reader interpretations. Among the 443 slides analyzed in this study, 101 (22.8%) showed discrepant results between the compared methods. The rates of discrepant results according to the specimen types were 5.7% (9/157) for positive blood cultures, 42% (60/142) for respiratory tract specimens, and 22% (32/144) for sterile site specimens. After a subsequent review of the discrepant slides, the final rate of discrepancies dropped to 7.0% (31/443). The overall agreement between the compared methods and the culture results reached 78% (345/443) and 79% (349/443) for manual microscopy and automated digital imaging, respectively. According to culture results, the specificity for automated digital imaging and manual microscopy were 90.8% and 87.7% respectively. In contrast, sensitivity was 84.1% for the two compared methods. The discrepant results were mostly encountered with microorganism morphologies of rare occurrence. The results reported in this study emphasize that on-screen reading is challenging, since the recognition of morphologies on-screen can appear different as compared to routine manual microscopy. Monitoring of Gram stain errors, which is facilitated by automated digital imaging, remains crucial for the quality control of reported Gram stain results.
- Published
- 2021
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