Antibiotics (Aug 2021)

Direct Testing for KPC-Mediated Carbapenem Resistance from Blood Samples Using a T2 Magnetic Resonance Based Assay

  • Giulia De Angelis,
  • Riccardo Paggi,
  • Thomas J. Lowery,
  • Jessica L. Snyder,
  • Giulia Menchinelli,
  • Maurizio Sanguinetti,
  • Brunella Posteraro,
  • Antonella Mencacci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics10080950
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 950

Abstract

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Molecular-based carbapenem resistance testing in Gram-negative bacterial bloodstream infections (BSIs) is currently limited because of the reliance on positive blood culture (BC) samples. The T2Resistance™ panel may now allow the detection of carbapenemase- and other β-lactamase encoding genes directly from blood samples. We detected carbapenem resistance genes in 11 (84.6%) of 13 samples from patients with BC-documented BSIs (10 caused by KPC-producing Klebsiellapneumoniae and 1 caused by VIM/CMY-producing Citrobacter freundii). Two samples that tested negative for carbapenem resistance genes were from patients with BC-documented BSIs caused by KPC-producing K. pneumoniae who were receiving effective antibiotic therapy. In conclusion, our findings suggest that the T2Resistance™ panel can be a reliable tool for diagnosing carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative bacterial BSIs.

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