Diagnostics (Jun 2023)

Impact of the FilmArray Rapid Multiplex PCR Assay on Clinical Outcomes of Patients with Bacteremia

  • Mai Okamoto,
  • Makoto Maejima,
  • Taichiro Goto,
  • Takahiro Mikawa,
  • Kazuhiro Hosaka,
  • Yuki Nagakubo,
  • Yosuke Hirotsu,
  • Kenji Amemiya,
  • Hitomi Sueki,
  • Masao Omata

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13111935
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. 1935

Abstract

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Bacteremia is a serious disease with a reported mortality of 30%. Appropriate antibiotic use with a prompt blood culture can improve patient survival. However, when bacterial identification tests based on conventional biochemical properties are used, it takes 2 to 3 days from positive blood culture conversion to reporting the results, which makes early intervention difficult. Recently, FilmArray (FA) multiplex PCR panel for blood culture identification was introduced to the clinical setting. In this study, we investigated the clinical impact of the FA system on decision making for treating septic diseases and its association with patients’ survival. Our hospital introduced the FA multiplex PCR panel in July 2018. In this study, blood-culture-positive cases submitted between January and October 2018 were unbiasedly included, and clinical outcomes before and after the introduction of FA were compared. The outcomes included (i) the duration of use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, (ii) the time until the start of anti-MRSA therapy to MRSA bacteremia, and (iii) sixty-day overall survival. In addition, multivariate analysis was used to identify prognostic factors. In the FA group, overall, 122 (87.8%) microorganisms were concordantly retrieved with the FA identification panel. The duration of ABPC/SBT use and the start-up time of anti-MRSA therapy to MRSA bacteremia were significantly shorter in the FA group. Sixty-day overall survival was significantly improved by utilizing FA compared with the control group. In addition, multivariate analysis identified Pitt score, Charlson score, and utilization of FA as prognostic factors. In conclusion, FA can lead to the prompt bacterial identification of bacteremia and its effective treatment, thus significantly improving survival in patients with bacteremia.

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