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Blood culture-free ultra-rapid antimicrobial susceptibility testing

Cited 16 time in Web of Science Cited 19 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Tae Hyun; Kang, Junwon; Jang, Haewook; Joo, Hyelyn; Lee, Gi Yoon; Kim, Hamin; Cho, Untack; Bang, Hyeeun; Jang, Jisung; Han, Sangkwon; Kim, Dong Young; Lee, Chan Mi; Kang, Chang Kyung; Choe, Pyoeng Gyun; Kim, Nam Joong; Oh, Myoung-don; Kim, Taek Soo; Kim, Inho; Park, Wan Beom; Kwon, Sunghoon

Issue Date
2024-08
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Nature, Vol.632 No.8026, pp.893-902
Abstract
Treatment assessment and patient outcome for sepsis depend predominantly on the timely administration of appropriate antibiotics1-3. However, the clinical protocols used to stratify and select patient-specific optimal therapy are extremely slow4. In particular, the major hurdle in performing rapid antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) remains in the lengthy blood culture procedure, which has long been considered unavoidable due to the limited number of pathogens present in the patient's blood. Here we describe an ultra-rapid AST method that bypasses the need for traditional blood culture, thereby demonstrating potential to reduce the turnaround time of reporting drug susceptibility profiles by more than 40-60 h compared with hospital AST workflows. Introducing a synthetic beta-2-glycoprotein I peptide, a broad range of microbial pathogens are selectively recovered from whole blood, subjected to species identification or instantly proliferated and phenotypically evaluated for various drug conditions using a low-inoculum AST chip. The platform was clinically evaluated by the enrolment of 190 hospitalized patients suspected of having infection, achieving 100% match in species identification. Among the eight positive cases, six clinical isolates were retrospectively tested for AST showing an overall categorical agreement of 94.90% with an average theoretical turnaround time of 13 +/- 2.53 h starting from initial blood processing. An ultra-rapid antimicrobial susceptibility testing method is introduced that bypasses the need for traditional blood culture, demonstrating the potential to significantly reduce the turnaround time of reporting drug susceptibility profiles.
ISSN
0028-0836
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/209116
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07725-1
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Medicine
Research Area Immunology, Infectious Diseases, Vaccination, 감염병, 바이러스질환, 예방접종

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