PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

The effect of empiric antimicrobial treatment duration on detection of bacterial DNA in sterile surgical specimens.

  • John Joseph Farrell,
  • Huaping Wang,
  • Rangarajan Sampath,
  • Kristin S Lowery,
  • Robert A Bonomo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171074
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. e0171074

Abstract

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Initial antimicrobial treatment of patients with deep seated or invasive infections is typically empiric. Usually, cultures of specimens obtained from the suspected source of infection are performed to identify pathogens and guide continued antimicrobial treatment. When patients present with signs and symptoms of infection, but sterile body fluid or tissue specimens cannot be obtained in a timely fashion, growth of bacterial pathogens in culture may be inhibited following initiation of empiric antibiotic treatment. To address this clinical dilemma, we performed a prospective evaluation of conventional culture vs. PCR coupled to electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (PCR/ESI-MS) on sterile body fluids and tissues submitted to the diagnostic microbiology lab following initiation of empiric antibiotic treatment for patients with suspected infection. In this series of surgical samples, PCR/ESI-MS identified bacterial pathogen(s) in 56% (49/87) of patients with non-diagnostic cultures. Examination of patients stratified by antibiotic treatment duration demonstrated that PCR/ESI-MS sustains high rates of bacterial DNA detection over time by generalized estimating equation models (p<0.0001).