Scientific Reports (May 2017)

Rapid susceptibility profiling of carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae

  • K. T. Mulroney,
  • J. M. Hall,
  • X. Huang,
  • E. Turnbull,
  • N. M. Bzdyl,
  • A. Chakera,
  • U. Naseer,
  • E. M. Corea,
  • M. J. Ellington,
  • K. L. Hopkins,
  • A. L. Wester,
  • O. Ekelund,
  • N. Woodford,
  • T. J. J. Inglis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02009-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract The expanding global distribution of multi-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae demands faster antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) to guide antibiotic treatment. Current ASTs rely on time-consuming differentiation of resistance and susceptibility after initial isolation of bacteria from a clinical specimen. Here we describe a flow cytometry workflow to determine carbapenem susceptibility from bacterial cell characteristics in an international K. pneumoniae isolate collection (n = 48), with a range of carbapenemases. Our flow cytometry-assisted susceptibility test (FAST) method combines rapid qualitative susceptible/non-susceptible classification and quantitative MIC measurement in a single process completed shortly after receipt of a primary isolate (54 and 158 minutes respectively). The qualitative FAST results and FAST-derived MIC (MICFAST) correspond closely with broth microdilution MIC (MICBMD, Matthew’s correlation coefficient 0.887), align with the international AST standard (ISO 200776-1; 2006) and could be used for rapid determination of antimicrobial susceptibility in a wider range of Gram negative and Gram positive bacteria.