Journal of clinical microbiology
-
J. Clin. Microbiol. · Aug 2018
Comparative StudyIn Vitro Evaluation of BacT/Alert FA Blood Culture Bottles and T2Candida Assay for Detection of Candida in the Presence of Antifungals.
The T2Candida assay is a novel, non-culture-based assay for the diagnosis of candidemia directly from whole blood. The impact of antifungals on the performance of the T2Candida assay and blood culture bottles has not been well described. In this study, the performance of the T2Candida assay was compared to that of blood culture in detecting Candida spp. in spiked blood cultures with or without the presence of antifungals. ⋯ In the absence of antifungals, T2Candida assay sensitivity was comparable to that of blood culture at both the low inoculum and the high inoculum (95% versus 97.5% and 100% versus 100%, respectively) and the assay had an average TTD that was significantly shorter (5.1 h versus 27.2 to 30 h, respectively). Neither caspofungin nor fluconazole was observed to impact the sensitivity or TTD of the T2Candida assay, while fluconazole reduced the overall blood culture sensitivity by 7.5% to 12.5% (at the low inoculum and high inoculum, respectively) and significantly increased the TTD of Candida albicans, C. tropicalis, and C. parapsilosis by 14.8 to 67 h. Neither caspofungin nor fluconazole impacted the performance of the T2Candida assay in vitro, and the assay may be useful for the diagnosis of candidemia in patients receiving antifungal therapy.
-
J. Clin. Microbiol. · Aug 2018
Comparative StudyPerformance Evaluation of a Prototype Architect Antibody Assay for Babesia microti.
The tick-borne protozoan Babesia microti is responsible for more than 200 cases of transfusion-transmitted babesiosis (TTB) infection in the United States that have occurred over the last 30 years. Measures to mitigate the risk of TTB include nucleic acid testing (NAT) and B. microti antibody testing. A fully automated prototype B. microti antibody test was developed on the Architect instrument. ⋯ The prototype assay detected 56 of 58 (96.6%) human subjects diagnosed with clinical babesiosis by both PCR and IFA testing. Overall, the prototype anti-Babesia assay provides a highly sensitive and specific test for the diagnosis of B. microti infection. While PCR is preferred for detection of window-period parasitemia, antibody tests detect infected subjects during periods of low-level parasitemia.
-
J. Clin. Microbiol. · Aug 2018
Editorial Comparative StudyShotgun Metagenomic Detection of Pathogens: a Micro-Comic Strip.