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Culturing periprosthetic tissue in BacT/Alert® Virtuo blood culture system leads to improved and faster detection of prosthetic joint infections

Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/16037
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-4206-x
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Publisher`s version (PDF)
Date
2019-07-10
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Author
Sanabria-Moreno, Adriana Maria; Røkeberg, Merethe E.O.; Johannessen, Mona; Sollid, Johanna U Ericson; Simonsen, Gunnar Skov; Hanssen, Anne Merethe
Abstract
Background - Blood culture bottles (BCBs) provide a semiautomated method for culturing periprosthetic tissue specimens. A study evaluating BCBs for culturing clinical samples other than body fluids is needed before implementation into clinical practice. Our objective was to evaluate use of the BacT/Alert® Virtuo blood culture system for culturing periprosthetic tissue specimens.

Methods - The study was performed through the analysis of spiked (n = 36) and clinical (n = 158) periprosthetic tissue samples. Clinical samples were analyzed by the BCB method and the results were compared to the conventional microbiological culture-based method for time to detection and microorganisms identified.

Results - The BacT/Alert® Virtuo blood culture system detected relevant bacteria for prosthetic joint infection in both spiked and clinical samples. The BCB method was found to be as sensitive (79%) as the conventional method (76%) (p = 0.844) during the analyses of clinical samples. The BCB method yielded positive results much faster than the conventional method: 89% against 27% detection within 24 h, respectively. The median detection time was 11.1 h for the BCB method (12 h and 11 h for the aerobic and the anaerobic BCBs, correspondingly).

Conclusion - We recommend using the BacT/Alert® Virtuo blood culture system for analyzing prosthetic joint tissue, since this detect efficiently and more rapidly a wider range of bacteria than the conventional microbiological method.

Is part of
Sanabria-Moreno, A.M. (2020). A Shotgun-metagenomics approach for laboratory diagnostics in clinical microbiology. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/19740
Publisher
BMC
Citation
Sanabria, A., Røkeberg, M.E.O., Johannessen, M., Sollid, J.E., Simonsen, G.S. & Hanssen, A-M. (2019). Culturing periprosthetic tissue in BacT/Alert® Virtuo blood culture system leads to improved and faster detection of prosthetic joint infections. BMC Infectious Diseases, 19:607. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-4206-x
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