Rapid Detection of Imipenem Resistance in Gram-Negative Bacteria Using Tabletop Scanning Electron Microscopy: A Preliminary Evaluation

Archive ouverte

Haddad, Gabriel | Fontanini, Anthony | Bellali, Sara | Takakura, Tatsuki | Ominami, Yusuke | Hisada, Akiko | Hadjadj, Linda | Rolain, Jean-Marc | Raoult, Didier | Bou Khalil, Jacques Yaacoub

Edité par CCSD ; Frontiers Media -

International audience. Background: Enabling faster Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (AST) is critical, especially to detect antibiotic resistance, to provide rapid and appropriate therapy and to improve clinical outcomes. Although several standard and automated culture-based methods are available and widely used, these techniques take between 18 and 24 h to provide robust results. Faster techniques are needed to reduce the delay between test and results. Methods: Here we present a high throughput AST method using a new generation of tabletop scanning electron microscope, to evaluate bacterial ultra-structural modifications associated with susceptibilities to imipenem as a proof of concept. A total of 71 reference and clinical strains of Gram-negative bacteria were used to evaluate susceptibility toward imipenem after 30, 60, and 90 min of incubation. The length, width and electron density of bacteria were measured and compared between imipenem susceptible and resistant strains. Results: We correlated the presence of these morphological changes to the bacterial susceptibility and their absence to the bacterial resistance (e.g., Pseudomonas aeruginosa length without [2.24 ± 0.61 μm] and with [2.50 ± 0.68 μm] imipenem after 30 min [ p = 3.032E-15 ]; Escherichia coli width without [0.92 ± 0.07 μm] and with [1.28 ± 0.19 μm] imipenem after 60 min [ p = 1.242E-103 ]). We validated our method by a blind test on a series of 58 clinical isolates where all strains were correctly classified as susceptible or resistant toward imipenem. Conclusion: This method could be a potential tool for rapidly identifying carbapenem-resistance in Enterobacterales in clinical microbiology laboratories in <2 h, allowing the empirical treatment of patients to be rapidly adjusted.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Scanning Electron Microscope: A New Potential Tool to Replace Gram Staining for Microbe Identification in Blood Cultures

Archive ouverte | Haddad, Gabriel | CCSD

International audience. Blood culture is currently the most commonly used method for diagnosing sepsis and bloodstream infections. However, the long turn-around-time to achieve microbe identification remains a major...

A preliminary investigation into bacterial viability using scanning electron microscopy–energy-dispersive X-ray analysis: The case of antibiotics

Archive ouverte | Haddad, Gabriel | CCSD

International audience. The metabolic stages of bacterial development and viability under different stress conditions induced by disinfection, chemical treatments, temperature, or atmospheric changes have been thoro...

Antimicrobial susceptibility testing for Gram positive cocci towards vancomycin using scanning electron microscopy

Archive ouverte | Bellali, Sara | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...