Clinical Hematology International (Jun 2019)

Nanosphere's Verigene® Blood Culture Assay to Detect Multidrug-Resistant Gram-Negative Bacterial Outbreak: A Prospective Study on 79 Hematological Patients in a Country with High Prevalence of Antimicrobial Resistance

  • Raffaella Greco,
  • Maria Chiara Barbanti,
  • Nicasio Mancini,
  • Laura Infurnari,
  • Renée Pasciuta,
  • Alessandra Forcina,
  • Chiara Oltolini,
  • Gabriele Casirati,
  • Daniele Mannina,
  • Fabio Giglio,
  • Carlo Messina,
  • Mara Morelli,
  • Francesca Lorentino,
  • Sara Mastaglio,
  • Tommaso Perini,
  • Luca Vago,
  • Paolo Scarpellini,
  • Matteo Giovanni Carrabba,
  • Maria Teresa Lupo Stanghellini,
  • Sarah Marktel,
  • Andrea Assanelli,
  • Massimo Bernardi,
  • Consuelo Corti,
  • Jacopo Peccatori,
  • Massimo Clementi,
  • Fabio Ciceri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2991/chi.d.190321.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2

Abstract

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Infections are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in hematological patients. We prospectively tested a new molecular assay (Verigene®) in 79 consecutive hematological patients, with sepsis by gram-negative bacteria. A total of 82 gram-negative microorganisms were isolated by blood cultures, of which 76 cases were mono-microbial. Considering the bacteria detectable by the system, the concordance with standard blood cultures was 100%. Resistance genes were detected in 20 of the isolates and 100% were concordant with the phenotypic antibiotic resistance. Overall, this new assay correctly identified 66/82 of all the gram-negative pathogens, yielding a general sensitivity of 80.5%, and providing information on genetic antibiotic resistance in a few hours. This new molecular assay could ameliorate patient management, resulting in a more rational use of antibiotics.

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