EVOLUTION OF THE VITEK MS - bioMérieux Clinical Diagnostics
Transcription
EVOLUTION OF THE VITEK MS - bioMérieux Clinical Diagnostics
EVOLUTION OF THE VITEK® MS Axima@SARAMIS™ (Research Use Only) VITEK MS RUO (Research Use Only) SARAMIS database VITEK MS IVD V1 Pre-commercialized database bioMérieux developed database VITEK MS IVD V1 VITEK MS IVD V2 VITEK MS Plus (IVD Plus RUO) VITEK MS IVD V3 Next VITEK MS IVD version release INTRODUCTION The VITEK® MS* system is a MALDI-TOF (Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization - Time of Flight) Mass Spectrometry system that has been designed to provide an accurate and reliable identification result rapidly to the microbiology laboratory. Moreover, the VITEK MS system aids the physician in diagnosing and confirming microbial infections quickly which ultimately helps reduce the time for effective treatment and management of patients with infectious diseases. MALDI-TOF MS allows for the detection of high-abundance soluble proteins, including ribosomal and other structural proteins, directly from intact microbial cells resulting in spectra that are analyzed with the VITEK MS system. The VITEK MS database has been created by collecting mass spectra from multiple isolates per species, geographically diverse isolates, different sample origins, and different media with different incubation times. The VITEK MS system has a comprehensive database of clinically relevant species that allows the identification of organisms in a matter of minutes. Compared with conventional phenotype or PCR-based identification, MALDI-TOF MS shows rapid turnaround time (1-2 minutes per sample), low sample volume requirements, and low reagent costs. The VITEK MS legacy began with Axima@SARAMIS™, evolving into the VITEK MS RUO system and then into the VITEK MS IVD system, as shown on the opposite page. The VITEK MS system includes the VITEK MS Prep Station, VITEK MS Acquisition Station and Myla® software. The VITEK MS Plus system integrates both the VITEK MS routine database with the open VITEK MS RUO database (also known as the SARAMIS database) • The VITEK MS Prep Station securely links specimen information with each spot on the target slide and to the VITEK 2 Cassette containing the Susceptibility card. • T he VITEK MS Acquisition station receives the spectra data from the instrument which are then sent to the Myla software. • M yla is connected to both the VITEK MS Prep Station and Acquisition Station allowing for complete traceability, and holds the compute engine software for identification. * The VITEK® MS system is not available for diagnostic use in all countries. Contact your local representative for more information on availability in your country CONTENTS ➔ ARTICLES VITEK® MS IVD (In Vitro Diagnostic Applications) An extraction method of positive blood cultures for direct identification of Candida species by Vitek MS matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry. 4 Lavergne RA, Chauvin P, Valentin A, Fillaux J, Roques-Malecaze C, Arnaud S, Menard S, Magnaval JF, Berry A, Cassaing S, Iriart X. MEDICAL MYCOLOGY 2013 ; Early Online:1-5 Comparison of two matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry methods and API 20AN for identification of clinically relevant anaerobic bacteria. 5 Jamal WY, Shahin M, Rotimi VO. JOURNAL OF MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2012 Dec 14 [Epub ahead of print] Comparison of Vitek MS (MALDI-TOF) to standard routine identification methods: an advance but no panacea. 6 Harris P, Winney I, Ashhurst-Smith C, O’Brien M, Graves S. PATHOLOGY 2012 ; 44(6): 583-5 Evaluation of species-specific PCR, Bruker MS, VITEK MS and the VITEK 2 system for the identification of clinical Enterococcus isolates. 7 Fang H, Ohlsson AK, Ullberg M, Ozenci V. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES 2012 ; 31(11): 3073-7 Routine Identification of Medical Fungi by the New Vitek MS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight System with a New Time-Effective Strategy. 8 Iriart X, Lavergne RA, Fillaux J, Valentin A, Magnaval JF, Berry A, Cassaing S. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY. 2012 ; 50 (6): 2107-10 Performances of the Vitek MS matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry system for rapid identification of bacteria in routine clinical microbiology. 9 Dubois D, Grare M, Prere MF, Segonds C, Marty N, Oswald E. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2012 ; 50(8):2568-76 Comparison of the Microflex LT and Vitek MS systems for Routine Identification of Bacteria by Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry. 10 Martiny D, Busson L, Wybo I, El Haj RA, Dediste A, Vandenberg O. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY. 2012 ; 50(4):1313-25 VITEK® MS RUO (Research Use Only) Evaluation of the Bruker Biotyper and Vitek MS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry Systems for Identification of Nonfermenting Gram-Negative Bacilli Isolated from Cultures from Cystic Fibrosis Patients. 11 Marko DC, Saffert RT, Cunningham SA, Hyman J, Walsh J, Arbefeville S, Howard W, Pruessner J, Safwat N, Cockerill FR, Bossler AD, Patel R, Richter SS. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY. 2012 ; 50(6): 2034-9 Additional Research Capabilities of the VITEK® MS RUO Rapid Identification of Bacteria and Yeasts from Positive BacT/ALERT Blood Culture Bottles by Using a Lysis-Filtration Method and MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrum Analysis with SARAMIS Database. 12 Fothergill A, Kasinathan V, Hyman J, Walsh J, Drake T, Wang YF. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2013 ; 51(3): 805-9 List of Publications on the Axima@SARAMIS™ 13 ➔ POSTERS MSACL - February 9-13, 2013 - San Diego, CA, USA VITEK® MS IVD V3 Identification of Mycobacteria by VITEK® MS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization –Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry. 15 Deol P., Girard V., Hyman J., Miller E., Dussoulier R., Mailler S., Schrenzel J., Beni A-M., Ninet Bescher B., Walsh J., Gates A., Arsac M., Chatellier S., Dunne W. and Van Nuenen M. ADDITIONAL RESEARCH CAPABILITIES ON THE VITEK® MS RUO Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization –Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry for rapid antibiotic resistance detection. 18 Mirande C., Canard I., Perrot N., Welker M., Van Belkum A. and Chatellier S. MICROBES – September 21-23, 2012 – Sheffield, UK VITEK® MS IVD V1 Identification of Salmonella enterica spp. enterica using the VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry System. 20 Identification of Streptococcus pneumoniae and Non-pneumococcal Streptococci of the Streptococcus mitis Group using the VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry System 21 N. Reading, H.M. Kilgariff, N Ratnaraja N. Reading, H.M. Kilgariff, N Ratnaraja ASM - June 16-19, 2012 - San Francisco, CA, USA ADDITIONAL RESEARCH CAPABILITIES ON THE VITEK® MS RUO Rapid Identification of Bacteria and Yeasts from Positive Blood Culture Bottles by Using a Lysis-Filtration Method and MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrum Analysis with SARAMIS Database 22 A. Fothergill, V. Kasinathan, J. Hyman, J. Walsh, T. Drake, X. Huang, E. M. Burd, Y. F. Wang. ECCMID - March 31–April 3, 2012 – London, UK VITEK® MS IVD V1 Optimized integration of new technologies (PREVI® Isola and VITEK® MS ) in a microbiology laboratory using the Lean 6 Sigma methodology 24 Rapid and accurate identification of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli isolates using the VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry system 26 Evaluation of the VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry system in a routine clinical laboratory 27 J. Collard, G. Habib J. Djapo Tiani, L. Van Helleputte, H. Palumbo. N. Reading, H.M. Kilgariff, N Ratnaraja N. Reading, A. Dadrah, A. Symonds, H.M. Kilgariff, N. Ratnaraja ADDITIONAL RESEARCH CAPABILITIES ON THE VITEK® MS RUO Clinical Testing of Bacteria and Yeast from Pediatric Patients by Using MALDI-TOF VITEK® MS System V. Kasinathan, X. Zheng, A. Fothergill, D. Carter, Y.F. Wang 28 VITEK® MS IVD VITEK® MS IVD V1 February, 2013 A specified research extraction protocol was used with the final organism identification performed on the VITEK MS IVD V1 database MEDICAL MYCOLOGY 2013; Early Online:1-5 An extraction method of positive blood cultures for direct identification of Candida species by Vitek MS matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry. Lavergne RA, Chauvin P, Valentin A, Fillaux J, Roques-Malecaze C, Arnaud S, Menard S, Magnaval JF, Berry A, Cassaing S, Iriart X. Complete identification of yeasts with conventional methods currently takes at least 48 hours and sometimes several days. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) is a promising alternative allowing faster identification of yeasts and more rapid initiation of antifungal therapy. This study reports the first evaluation of an extraction method associated with the VITEK® MS matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry for direct identification of Candida species from positive blood cultures. This protocol was evaluated with blood cultures that were inoculated with reference and routine isolates (eight reference strains, 30 patients isolates and six mixed cultures containing two strains of different Candida species), or from patients with candidemia (28 isolates). A total of 97% of all isolates included in the study were correctly identified, showing that the extraction protocol used with the VITEK® MS system performed extremely well with blood cultures of single Candida spp. Nevertheless, subculture remains indispensable to test fungal resistance and to detect mixed infections. This method significantly reduced the time of diagnosis and is easily adaptable for use in routine culture. “This easy extraction method combined with the VITEK® MS system constitutes a powerful alternative for the identification of Candida spp. directly from positive blood cultures.” KEY POINTS ➔ 97% of all isolates included in this study were correctly identified with the use of the study’s extraction protocol. ➔ The VITEK® MS used in conjunction with this extraction method can significantly reduce the time of diagnosis. 4 VITEK® MS IVD VITEK® MS IVD V1December, 2012 JOURNAL OF MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2012 Dec 14. [Epub ahead of print] Comparison of two matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry methods and API 20AN for identification of clinically relevant anaerobic bacteria. Jamal WY, Shahin M, Rotimi VO. The study evaluated two commercially available MALDI-TOF MS systems, Bruker Microflex MS and bioMérieux VITEK® MS, for identification of 274 clinically significant anaerobic bacteria recovered from routine cultures of clinical specimens in parallel with conventional biochemical (API® 20AN) or molecular methods. Discrepant results that failed to provide acceptable MALDI-TOF identifications were resolved by gold standard 16S gene sequencing. VITEK® MS gave high confidence identification of the 274 isolates, all of which were correctly identified. Bruker Microflex MS system also gave high confidence identification for 272 of the 274 specimens. After discrepancy testing, the Bruker MS results agreed with biochemical or molecular method for 89.1% of the isolates at species level, 10.2% at genus level (0.72% were misidentified). With VITEK® MS, the level of agreement was 100% species, 100% genus and none were misidentified. The data provided in this study suggests that implementation of MALDI-TOF MS as a first step for identification will shorten the turnaround time and reduce costs in the Anaerobe Microbiology Laboratory. “MALDI-TOF is a rapid, simple, inexpensive technique…. that can easily be implemented in the routine conventional laboratory.” KEY POINTS ➔ T he VITEK® MS correctly identified ALL 274 clinical anaerobic isolates to the species level compared to 89.1% by the Bruker Microflex™ ➔ The MALDI-TOF MS can reduce reagent use (cost) and labor cost significantly. 5 VITEK® MS IVD VITEK® MS IVD V1October, 2012 PATHOLOGY 2012; 44(6):583-5 Comparison of Vitek MS (MALDI-TOF) to standard routine identification methods: an advance but no panacea. Harris P, Winney I, Ashhurst-Smith C, O’Brien M, Graves S. A parallel verification trial was conducted between the VITEK MS and routine identifications (VITEK 2, API, BBL, RapID ANAII, and other rapid bench tests). The study consisted of 750 pure isolates from 150 different species of bacteria and yeasts. 695 (93%) were wild-type strains obtained from clinical specimens, 39 (5%) were stored external Quality Assurance Program (QAP) organisms from the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia (RCPA) and 16 (2%) were reference strains from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC). All isolates were tested with ∂-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid matrix solutions. All suspected yeasts were treated with 25% formic acid. If the results of the VITEK MS and routine methods were unresolved, then isolates were referred to a reference laboratory for definitive identification, including 16S rDNA sequencing. Out of the 750 isolates, 707 (94.3%) showed concordance between the VITEK MS and standard identification methods to the genus level, and 639 (85.2%) to the species level. The VITEK MS was found to be reliable and accurate for routine microbial identification in most instances. There is a significant potential to reduce turnaround times, improve clinical patient care with timely antibiotic therapy, enhance identification of some challenging organisms, and provide long-term cost savings. In some areas, the database seems limited. Therefore, future enhancements of the database including additional species is needed. “The ease and reliability of MALDI-TOF MS allows less reliance on several additional tests… providing further savings.” KEY POINTS ➔ VITEK® MS accurately identifies the most common pathogens encountered in routine laboratory work. ➔ VITEK® MS improves identification of some uncommon organisms that may be difficult to identify. 6 VITEK® MS IVD VITEK® MS IVD V1 June, 2012 EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES 2012;31(11):3073-7 Evaluation of species-specific PCR, Bruker MS, VITEK MS and the VITEK 2 system for the identification of clinical Enterococcus isolates Fang H, Ohlsson AK, Ullberg M, Ozenci V This study compared the performance of the most relevant diagnostic methods available for the identification of clinical Enterococcus species, as follows:(1) a multiplex real-time PCR assay targeting ddl Enterococcus faecium, ddl Enterococcus faecalis, vanC1 and vanC2/C3 genes, and a high-resolution melting (HRM) analysis of the groESL gene for the differentiation of Enterococcus casseliflavus and Enterococcus gallinarum; (2) Bruker MS; (3) VITEK® MS; and (4) the VITEK® 2 system. 16S rRNA gene sequencing was used as a reference method in the study. The 132 isolates included in the study were identified as 32 E. faecalis, 63 E. faecium, 16 E. casseliflavus and 21 E. gallinarum. The multiplex PCR, Bruker MS and VITEK MS were able to identify all the isolates correctly at the species level. The VITEK 2 system could identify 131/132 (99.2 %) and 121/132 (91.7 %) of the isolates at the genus and species levels, respectively. The HRM-groESL assay identified all (21/21) E. gallinarum isolates and 81.3 % (13/16) of the E. casseliflavus isolates. The PCR methods described in the present study are effective in identifying the enterococcal species. MALDI-TOF MS is a rapid, reliable and cost-effective identification technique for enterococci. “The developments in matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI–TOF) are rapidly changing the routine diagnostics scene in clinical microbiology laboratories.” KEY POINTS ➔ PCR assay results are available in hours whereas MALDI-TOF results are available in minutes. KEY POINTS ➔A ccurate identification of enterococcal isolates at the species level is important for early appropriate antimicrobial therapy as well as surveillance. ➔ The results between the PCR assays and MALDI-TOF identified all isolates correctly. 7 VITEK® MS IVD VITEK® MS IVD V1 June, 2012 JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2012;50(6):2107-10. Routine Identification of Medical Fungi by the New Vitek MS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight System with a New Time-Effective Strategy. Iriart X, Lavergne RA, Fillaux J, Valentin A, Magnaval JF, Berry A, Cassaing S. The study evaluated the VITEK® MS system for rapid fungal identification. A strategy using a single deposit without prior protein extraction was utilized to save time and money. Clinical isolates were used to evaluate the performance of the VITEK® MS compared to that of both routine laboratory techniques and VITEK® 2. 236 isolates, representing 27 species of fungi, were analyzed. With all species included, the VITEK® MS performed well in the identification of yeasts and Aspergillus fungi (93.2% of correct identifications). Considering only the species present in the VITEK® MS database, 98.2% of the total yeasts had a correct identification and 100% of Aspergillus species. The VITEK® MS system also represents a major improvement in terms of time and money saving. “The new VITEK® MS system … has an excellent performance profile for the identification of a large panel of yeasts and for Aspergillus fungi” KEY POINTS ➔A ll of the Aspergillus isolates included in the database were correctly identified by VITEK® MS when compared to DNA sequencing results. ➔ VITEK®included MS system, utilizing strategy of a single deposit an excellent 97%T he of new all isolates in this study awere correctly identified withwithout the use prior of theprotein study’sextraction, extractionhas protocol. performance profile for a large panel of yeasts and for Aspergillus fungi. ® The VITEK MS used in conjunction with this extraction method can significantly reduce the time of diagnosis. 8 VITEK® MS IVD VITEK® MS IVD V1 May, 2012 JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2012;50(8):2568-76 Performances of the Vitek MS matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry system for rapid identification of bacteria in routine clinical microbiology. Dubois D, Grare M, Prere MF, Segonds C, Marty N, Oswald E. The study objective was to assess the performance and technical practicability of the VITEK® MS system, using a single deposit and without prior extraction step from bacterial colonies. 767 routine clinical isolates representative of 50 genera and 124 species were tested on the VITEK® MS and then compared with reference identifications obtained mainly with the VITEK® 2 phenotypic system. If identifications were discordant, molecular techniques provided reference identifications. Using an original spectra classifier algorithm, the VITEK® MS system provided 96.2% correct identifications: to the species level (86.7%), to the genus level (8.2%), or within a range of species belonging to different genera (1.3%). 1.3% of isolates were misidentified and 2.5% were unidentified, partly because the species was not included in the database. A second deposit provided a successful identification for 0.8% of isolates unidentified with the first deposit. The VITEK® MS system is a simple, convenient, and accurate method for fast bacterial identification with a single deposit and without any extraction step. In addition to a second deposit in uncommon cases, expanding the spectral database is expected to further enhance performance. Technical ownership of the VITEK® MS is straightforward and fast, “The VITEK® MS system allows with only one deposit of crude bacteria and without any extraction step, a fast and reliable acquisition of bacterial ID for most bacterial species isolated routinely in a medical laboratory.” KEY POINTS ➔ T he VITEK® MS system generated a low frequency of unusable spectra without the use of a formic acid-based protein extraction. ➔ The VITEK® MS is able to discriminate S. pneumonia, a pathogen species from other alpha-hemolytic streptococci. 9 VITEK® MS IVD VITEK® MS IVD V1 PRE-COMMERCIALIZED DATABASE April, 2012 JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2012;50(4):1313-25. Comparison of the Microflex LT and Vitek MS systems for Routine Identification of Bacteria by Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry. Martiny D, Busson L, Wybo I, El Haj RA, Dediste A, Vandenberg O. The study compared the performance of MALDI-TOF systems currently commercialized in Europe regarding analytical accuracy and practicability to determine the best choice for use in a routine bacteriology laboratory. 1,129 isolates, including 1,003 routine isolates, 73 anaerobes, and 53 bacterial enteropathogens, were tested on the Microflex LT and Axima Assurance devices. The spectra were analyzed using three databases: Biotyper (Bruker Daltonics), Saramis, and VITEK® MS (bioMérieux). Among the routine isolates requiring identification to the species level (n = 986), 92.7% and 93.2% were correctly identified by the Biotyper and VITEK® MS databases, respectively. The VITEK® MS database is more specific for the identification of Streptococcus viridans. For the anaerobes, the Biotyper database often identified Fusobacterium isolates to only the genus level, which is of low clinical significance, whereas 20% of the Bacteroides species were not identified or were misidentified by the VITEK® MS database. For the enteropathogens, the poor discrimination between Escherichia coli and Shigella explains the high proportion of unidentified organisms. In contrast to the Biotyper database, the VITEK® MS database correctly discriminated all of the Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi isolates (n = 5). This study demonstrated the Microflex LT and VITEK® MS systems to be equally good choices in terms of analytical efficiency for routine procedures. Other factors including price, work flow, and lab activity, will affect the individual laboratory’s choice of a system. “The VITEK® MS IVD system will likely simplify laboratory quality management” KEY POINTS ➔ The VITEK® MS IVD system seemed to have more user-friendly software. ➔ T he VITEK® MS IVD system has a more highly developed quality management system because it contains dedicated for quality controls andstudy a well-defined traceability system. 97%positions of all isolates included in this were correctly identified with the use of the study’s extraction protocol. ® MS used in conjunction with this extraction method can significantly reduce the time of diagnosis. The VITEK ➔ The accuracy of the Biotyper database was found to be lower than that of the Saramis™ and VITEK® MS database 10 VITEK® MS RUO VITEK® MS RUOJune, 2012 JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2012;50(6):2034-9. Evaluation of the Bruker Biotyper and Vitek MS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry Systems for Identification of Nonfermenting Gram-Negative Bacilli Isolated from Cultures from Cystic Fibrosis Patients. Marko DC, Saffert RT, Cunningham SA, Hyman J, Walsh J, Arbefeville S, Howard W, Pruessner J, Safwat N, Cockerill FR, Bossler AD, Patel R, Richter SS. This blinded study evaluated Bruker Biotyper and VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF systems for the identification of non-fermenting Gram-negative bacilli (NFGNB) isolated from cystic fibrosis cultures compared to conventional biochemical or molecular methods. Two hundred NFGNB recovered from respiratory cultures from cystic fibrosis patients were sent to Mayo Clinic for analysis with the Bruker Biotyper (software version 3.0) and to bioMérieux for testing with VITEK® MS (SARAMIS database version 3.62). If two attempts at direct colony testing failed to provide an acceptable MALDITOF identification, an extraction procedure was performed. The MS identifications from both of these systems were compared to the biochemical or molecular identification that had been reported in the patient record. Isolates with discordant results were analyzed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing at the University of Iowa Health Care (UIHC). After discrepancy testing, the Bruker Biotyper result agreed with the biochemical or molecular method with 72.5% of isolates to the species level, 5.5% to the complex level, and 19% to the genus level (3% not identified). The level of agreement for VITEK® MS was 80% species, 3.5% complex, 6% genus, and 3.5% family (7% not identified). Both MS systems provided rapid (≤3 min per isolate) and reliable identifications. The identification of NFGNB by both MALDI-TOF MS systems was superior to conventional biochemical methods. The agreement of combined species/complex/genus-level identification with the reference method was higher for the Bruker Biotyper (97% versus 89.5%, P = 0.004) but required an extraction step more often. Species-level agreement with the reference method was similar for both MS systems (72.5% and 80% respectively, P = 0.099). “The accuracy, ease of use, low reagent cost, and speed of MALDI-TOF MS support the implementation of this technology for identification of NFGNB” KEY POINTS ➔ T he final identifications of P. aeruginosa, the predominant NFGNB isolated from CF patients, were 100% concordant KEY POINTS with biochemical or molecular methods. ➔W hen looking at all 16 B. cepacia complex isolates, the VITEK® MS RUO provided more species level identifications that agreed with the reference method than the Bruker system, without needing any prior extraction. 11 Additional Research Capabilities of the VITEK® MS RUO VITEK® MS RUO December, 2012 JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2013;51(3):805-9 Rapid Identification of Bacteria and Yeasts from Positive BacT/ALERT Blood Culture Bottles by Using a Lysis-Filtration Method and MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrum Analysis with SARAMIS Database. Fothergill A, Kasinathan V, Hyman J, Walsh J, Drake T, Wang YF This study evaluates the performance of a novel filtration-based method for processing positive BacT/ALERT® blood culture broth for immediate identification of microorganisms by MALDI-TOF VITEK® MS RUO (VMS). BacT/ALERT® non-charcoal based blood culture bottles that were flagged as positive by the BacT/ALERT®3D system were included. An aliquot of positive blood culture broth was incubated with lysis buffer for 2-4 minutes at room temperature, the resulting lysate was filtered through a membrane, and harvested microorganisms were identified by VMS. The lysis buffer used in this protocol eliminates blood cells, but leaves microorganisms intact for rapid analysis by MALDI-TOF MS. A total of 259 bottles were included in the study, comprising 225 monomicrobic and 28 polymicrobic positive blood cultures (6 bottles were negative on subculture). The VMS identified 189 (73%) cultures to the species level, 51 (19.7%) gave no identification (ID), while 6 (2.3%) gave identifications that were considered incorrect. Among 131 monomicrobic isolates from positive blood bottles with one spot having a score of 99.9%, all were correctly identified to the species level (100%). In 202 bottles where VMS was able to generate an ID, 189 (93.6%) were correct to the species level, whereas the IDs provided for 7 isolates (3.5%) were incorrect. In conclusion, this method does not require centrifugation and produces a clean spectrum for VMS analysis in less than 15 minutes. This study demonstrates the effectiveness of the new Lysis-Filtration method for identifying microorganisms directly from positive blood culture bottles in a clinical setting. “… the VMS when used in combination with the ‘direct-from-positive blood culture’ method described herein has the potential to greatly reduce the time to identification of possible agents of bacteremia/sepsis and to improve the delivery of appropriate antimicrobial therapy to the patient” KEY POINTS ➔ The lysis buffer used in this protocol eliminates blood cells while leaving microorganisms intact. 12 ➔ T his method does not require centrifugation and produces a clean, concentrated sample of microorganism in less than 15 minutes. Research Use Only List of Publications on the Axima@SARAMIS™ Comparison of two matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation-time of flight mass spectrometry methods for the identification of clinically relevant anaerobic bacteria. Veloo AC, Knoester M, Degener JE, Kuijper EJ. CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION 2011;17(10):1501-6. Improved clinical laboratory identification of human pathogenic yeasts by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Bader O, Weig M, Taverne-Ghadwal L, Lugert R, Gross U, Kuhns M. CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION 2011;17(9):1359-65. Recognition of Clostridium difficile PCR-ribotypes 001, 027 and 126/078 using an extended MALDI-TOF MS system. Reil M, Erhard M, Kuijper EJ, Kist M, Zaiss H, Witte W, Gruber H, Borgmann S. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES 2011;30(11):1431-6. Species identification of staphylococci by amplification and sequencing of the tuf gene compared to the gap gene and by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Bergeron M, Dauwalder O, Gouy M, Freydiere AM, Bes M, Meugnier H, Benito Y, Etienne J, Lina G, Vandenesch F, Boisset S. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES 2011;30(3):343-54. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry for the identification of clinically relevant bacteria. Benagli C, Rossi V, Dolina M, Tonolla M, Petrini O. PLoS One. 2011 25;6(1):e16424. Rapid identification of Legionella spp. by MALDI-TOF MS based protein mass fingerprinting. Gaia V, Casati S, Tonolla M. SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY 2011;34(1):40-44. Identification of Staphylococcus intermedius Group by MALDI-TOF MS. Decristophoris P, Fasola A, Benagli C, Tonolla M, Petrini O. SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY 2011;34(1):45-51. Differentiation of species of the Streptococcus bovis/equinus-complex by MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry in comparison to sodA sequence analyses. Hinse D, Vollmer T, Erhard M, Welker M, Moore ER, Kleesiek K, Dreier J. SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY 2011;34(1):52-57. Identification of Gram-positive anaerobic cocci by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Veloo AC, Erhard M, Welker M, Welling GW, Degener JE SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY 2011;34(1):58-62. 13 Research Use Only List of Publications on the Axima@SARAMIS™ (continued) Rapid genus- and species-specific identification of Cronobacter spp. by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry. Stephan R, Ziegler D, Pflüger V, Vogel G, Lehner A. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2010;48(8):2846-51 Comparison of two matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry methods with conventional phenotypic identification for routine identification of bacteria to the species level. Cherkaoui A, Hibbs J, Emonet S, Tangomo M, Girard M, Francois P, Schrenzel J. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 2010;48(4):1169-75. Identification of dermatophyte species causing onychomycosis and tinea pedis by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Erhard M, Hipler UC, Burmester A, Brakhage AA, Wöstemeyer J. EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY 2008;17(4):356-61. 14 ➔ MSACL / February, 2013 San Diego, CA, USA VITEK® MS IVD V3 Identification of Mycobacteria by VITEK® MS MatrixAssisted Laser Desorption Ionization –Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry Deol P.1, Girard V. 2, Hyman J.1, Miller E.1, Dussoulier R.1, Mailler S.2, Schrenzel J.3, Beni A-M.3, Ninet Bescher B.3, Walsh J.1, Gates A.1, Arsac M.2, Chatellier S.2, Dunne W.1 and Van Nuenen M.1 1/bioMérieux Inc., 100 Rodolphe St, Durham, NC, 27712 - 2/bioMérieux, Route de Port Michaud, 38390 La Balme Les Grottes, France 3/Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève, Laboratoire de Bactériologie, Rue Gabrielle Perret Gentil 4, 1211 Geneve 14, Switzerland ABSTRACT VITEK MS* consists of a MALDI-TOF mass spectrometer for microbial identification and a database recognizing unique fingerprints. ® Figure 1: Fluorescent staining results with bead beating, horizontal vortexing, and without mechanical disruption Mycobacterial species require inactivation and protein extraction due to their pathogenicity and lipid rich cell wall. The study describes a sample preparation method using mechanical disruption and chemical treatment tested f rom multiple growth media for spectral database development. Most of the 37 mycobacterial species, tested with an average of 8 strains per species, were clearly differentiated except the M. tuberculosis complex and M.fortuitum/M.porcinum. The identification results obtained using this sample preparation method and the mycobacteria database indicated a 100% species match for 34 species and 94-98% for the remaining 3 species. The VITEK® MS platform offers rapid, reliable, and robust microbial identification with high throughput. INTRODUCTION An accurate identification of mycobacteria species is essential for epidemiology, proper diagnosis, and administration of appropriate antimicrobial therapy. Identification of mycobacteria species represents a technical challenge for sample preparation due to cellular structure and pathogenicity. The processing procedure must ensure that organisms are rendered nonviable for safe handling outside of a biosafety level-3 environment and that both hydrophobic and hydrophilic cellular proteins are made accessible for subsequent ionization. This study describes a mycobacterial sample preparation method for use with VITEK® MS that ensures organism inactivation and extraction of proteins from cultures grown on solid (LJ and 7H11 agar) and in liquid (BacT/ALERT® MP and BACTEC™ MGIT™ 960) media. The inactivation and extraction method is suitable for routine laboratory work where simplification of workflow and safety are key factors. Yellowish green live cells on red background Red background with cell debris MATERIALS AND METHODS Drug-susceptible and resistant strains of M. tuberculosis and nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) were used for the inactivation study. Optimal inactivation is achieved using mechanical disruption (bead beating for 5 min or vortexing for 15 min) with 0.5 mm glass beads in a pre-sterilized vial containing 70% ethanol (Figure 1). After disruption, the sample is incubated for 10 min at room temperature in the same tube, and then centrifuged. The pellet is reconstituted with formic acid then acetonitrile is added. After centrifugation, the supernatant is placed on the target slide and overlain CHCA matrix. Figure 2 shows the steps of the sample processing method. For protein extraction, 2-20 strains per species (an average of 8 strains) of mycobacteria were grown on solid (LJ/Coletsos and 7H11 agar) and in liquid media (BacT/ALERT® MP and BACTEC™ MGIT™ 960). For the purpose of database development, all spectra were checked visually for quality and those with 80-200 peaks were considered. Cluster analysis was performed for each species of mycobacteria to assess intra-species diversity. DNA sequencing (16S or rpoB) was performed on all outlier strains for confirmation or inclusion/exclusion of spectra. Multidimensional analysis was conducted to evaluate the differentiation of species (Figure 3 is an example with a subset of the 37 species). VITEK® MS has not been cleared by the United States FDA for sale in the USA and is therefore not yet commercially available in the USA. 15 Identification of Mycobacteria by VITEK® MS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization -Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry Figure 2: Sample processing method from solid and liquid media. Growth from solid medium Centrifuge and discard supernatant Resuspend 1 ul loopful of growth in 500 ul 70% EtOH (in vial containing 0.5 mm glass beads) Resuspend in 500 ul 70% EtOH and transfert suspension (to vial containing 0.5 mm glass beads) Growth from liquid medium Take aliquot (2 ml from MGIT/ 3 ml from MP Bottle) +MGIT / MIP bottle Mycobacteria Sample If bead beater not available, Vortex for 15 min, incubate 10 min ** «Bead Beat» for 5 min, incubate 10 minutes (inactivation time) Vortex, transfert suspension to empty vial E.coli ATCC 8739 18-24 hours old Apply 1 ul loopful directly to target slide Inoculate 1 ul CHCA Matrix on target slide Centrifuge (e.g. 10,000 rpm for 2 min), remove EtOH supernatant Add 10 ul 70% formic acid, vortex Control Sample Add 10 ul acetonitrile, centrifuge Inoculate 1 ul of suspension on target slide Test in VITEK MS RESULTS CONCLUSION The samples with mechanical disruption either by bead beater or vortex at recommended times clearly show cell disruption as compared to the control samples without disruption (Figure 1). No growth was observed in all media types tested for 42 days. Mechanical disruption followed by 70% ethanol treatment is a quick and effective inactivation method for mycobacteria species. Extraction of proteins is performed in a minimal volume to achieve good quality spectra. The method is safe, short, requires less manipulation and is suitable for routine laboratory work. The process from inactivation of mycobacteria to slide preparation takes 20-35 minutes depending upon number of samples and mechanical disruption method. The extracted proteins are concentrated in a minimal final volume. The process is standardized for cultures grown on solid and in liquid media. The mycobacterial database is currently comprised of 1286 spectra. Among the M. tuberculosis complex species tested, M. tuberculosis, M. bovis, and M. africanum spectra look very similar and the same finding was observed for M. fortuitum and M. porcinum (as shown in the multidimensional analysis in Figure 3). Clinically relevant NTM such as M. scrofulaceum, M. kansasii, M. haemophilum, and M. xenopi The rapid growing mycobacteria M. chelonae, and M. smegmatis patterns (Figure 4). M. avium, M. intracellulare, M. gordonae, M. marinum, indicated clear differentiation. M. abscessus, M. fortuitum, also exhibited distinguishable Cluster analysis based on peak similarity in the spectra indicated consistent results with different media for each mycobacterial species tested. Figure 5 shows the similarity of spectra of M. tuberculosis 25177 grown in different media types. Preliminary identification results demonstrated 100% species match for 34 mycobacterial species and 94-98% match for the remaining 3. 16 The VITEK® MS Mycobacteria database currently consists of 1286 spectra from 37 species (2-20 strains per species). Preliminary identification results demonstrated 100% match for 34 species and 94-98% match for the remaining 3. Work is in progress to enhance the VITEK® MS database with additional mycobacteria species. Identification of Mycobacteria by VITEK® MS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization -Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry Figure 3: Multidimensional analysis showing distinction and overlaps between Mycobacterial species MDS colored according to Mycobacteria species Kansasii Fortuitum, Porcinum Africanum, Bovis, Tuberculosis Avium Genavense Figure 4: Cluster analysis showing distinction between rapid growing mycobacterial species M. abscessus, M. chelonae, M. smegmatis and M. fortuitum M. abscessus M. chelonae M. smegmatis M. fortuitum Figure 5: Spectra of M. tuberculosis 25177 from different media types. 17 ➔ MSACL / February, 2013 San Diego, CA, USA Additional Research Capabilities on the VITEK® MS RUO Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization –Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry for rapid antibiotic resistance detection Mirande C., Canard I., Perrot N., Welker M., Van Belkum A. and Chatellier S. Research & Development Microbiology, bioMérieux, La Balme-les-Grottes, France ABSTRACT MATERIALS AND METHODS Hydrolytic enzymes play a major role in antibiotic resistance of Gram negative bacterial species. These enzymes hydrolyze certain antibiotics, leading to their inactivation. Our work shows that Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization-Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-ToF MS) is a rapid and well-adapted tool for the analysis of antibiotic degradation. Herein, we describe a fast assay to monitor faropenem hydrolysis by resistant bacteria. Carbapenem-sensitive strains were used as β-lactamase negative controls. Well characterized K. pneumoniae isolates producing carbapenemases were included in the comparative hydrolysis assays (Table 2). Susceptibility results and resistance genes for each strain were determined by VITEK®2 antimicrobial susceptibility cards (bioMérieux, Marcy l’Etoile, France) and by PCR. A commercially available faropenem solution was used in combination with the different strains. Bacteria were re-suspended (0.5, 1 or 2 McF) in the antibiotic solution (0.1, 0.25 and 0.5 mg/mL in H2O) and incubated at 37°C for 3 hours. Subsequently, the tubes were centrifuged for 2 min at 13,000g at room temperature (Figure 2). For the first time, the bioMérieux VITEK® MS RUO instrument was used for such an approach and this instrument was shown to be suitable for qualitative measurements of enzyme-mediated drug degradation. INTRODUCTION Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time of flight (MALDI-ToF) mass spectrometry (MS) has been introduced into routine microbiological laboratories for the identification of bacteria and fungi and may also be applied in other aspects of the global clinical diagnostic process. A common resistance mechanism developed or acquired by different bacterial species involves the inactivation of β-lactam antibiotics by the expression of enzymes which hydrolyze the β- lactam ring (Figure 1). Figure 1: Native and hydrolysed form of faropenem HO H HO H H S ß-lactamase NH H O O O Faropenem Surpernatant A solution to this issue may involve using a MALDI-ToF MS to detect metabolites produced after β-lactamase hydrolysis rather than the β-lactamase itself. In mass spectra, hydrolysis of β-lactam ring results in disappearance of the original mass peak through a molecular mass shift of +18 Da (Table 1). Here we describe a rapid method for detection of the β-lactam faropenem hydrolysis and direct detection of carbapenemase activity with bioMérieux VITEK® MS RUO instrument. Table 1: Calculated masses (Da) and corresponding molecular structures of faropenem Native forms VITEK®MS RUO OH Inactive Faropenem (hydrolysed) Today, the rapid detection of carbapenemases still is a major challenge in microbiological diagnostics. Direct detection of enzymes has remained elusive because many proteins involved in drug resistance are frequently not expressed at high levels compared to other bacterial proteins. Hydrolysed forms (+18 Da) M+H M+Na M+2Na M+3Na M+H M+Na M+2Na M+3Na 286,3 308,3 330,3 352,3 304,3 326,3 348,3 370,3 18 37°C - 3h Mass spectra analysis H OH OH O Faropenem O O N Figure 2: Methodology for antibiotic resistant detection Picking colonies H S The cell-free supernatant was analyzed by bioMérieux VITEK® MS RUO instrument in the 200-600 m/z mass range. Because background signals may confound these spectra, we tested α-cyano-4hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA) and 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) as matrix at various concentrations and diluted in ethanol, acetonitrile and/or water (in different proportions). RESULTS Optimization of hydrolysis detection : Spectra without background peak in the interval of 280-400 m/z were obtained using 10 mg/mL of CHCA in ethanol, acetonitrile and water (30/30/30). Optimal detection was obtained with the ratio antibiotic – bacterial inoculum : 0.25mg/mL - 2McF, respectively. Carbapenem-sensitive strains Spectra obtained after incubation with faropenem revealed the molecular peak of sodium salts of faropenem [M+Na]+ at m/z 308.3 and [M+2Na]+ at m/z 330.3. Carbapenemase-producing strains Spectra revealed decreased intensities of the peaks at m/z 308.3 and 330.3. Additional peaks at m/z 304.3, 326.3 and 348.3 appeared ➔ Hydrolyzed forms of faropenem (Table 1 and Figure 3). Matrix-Assisted Laser desorption Ionization -Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry for rapid antibiotic resistance detection Table 2: Bacterial strains characteristics and VITEK®MS RUO results Ratio of peak intensities at 308/379 was calculated and CHCA (m/z 379) was used as an internal standard (Table 2). MALDI-ToF MS Analysis Bacterial strains Isolate ref Resistance mechanism* Result Ratio 308/379 T0 T3h K. pneumoniae 1108001 KPC2 Degradation 0.45 0.03 K. pneumoniae 0601009 KPC Degradation 0.46 0.34 K. pneumoniae 0505049 KPC Degradation 0.56 0.43 K. pneumoniae 0601007 KPC Degradation 0.58 0.48 K. pneumoniae 11085008 KPC2 Degradation 0.70 0.57 K. pneumoniae 1108003 KPC3 Degradation 0.43 0.36 K. pneumoniae 1108002 KPC3 Degradation 0.51 0.34 K. pneumoniae 0505034 KPC No Degradation 0.38 0.49 K. pneumoniae 0603004 KPC No Degradation 0.38 0.38 E.coli 0607051 ESBL No Degradation 0.75 0.77 P. mirabilis 0607045 ESBL No Degradation 0.79 0.81 E.coli 0804151 HL Case No Degradation 0.17 0.22 M. morganii 0504063 HL Case No Degradation 0.29 0.38 S. aureus 7509008 / No Degradation 0.39 0.40 K. pneumoniae 1002015 / No Degradation 0.82 0.88 E.coli 7308009 / No Degradation 0.36 0.37 Negative control / / No Degradation 0.19 0.21 Ratios clearly decreased for resistant strains except for two strains n°0505034 and 0603004. Interestingly, strain n° 1108001 showed an important ratio decrease compared to the other strains. Such observation could be explained by the variations of expression at transcriptomic or post-transcriptomic level. This hypothesis could be verified by molecular approach. Rather, negative control (without strain) and non-carbapenemases-producing strains (without resistance mechanism, ESBL or HL Case) show a constant trend between T0 and T3h. Figure 3: Mass spectra obtained after faropenem hydrolysis assay CONCLUSION The MALDI-ToF MS-based analysis of resistance/susceptibility against β-lactam antibiotics is an approach which has recently been applied for the analysis of the hydrolysis of ampicillin, ertapenem, and meropenem by different bacterial strains. However, no study has yet been carried out with faropenem and with the bioMérieux VITEK® MS RUO instrument. VITEK® MS RUO instrument was shown to be suitable for qualitative measurements of enzyme-mediated drug degradation. Future studies will include various antibiotic families and additional susceptible and resistant strains to expand on this potentially clinically useful technique. 19 ➔ MICROBE / September, 2012 Sheffield (UK) VITEK® MS IVD V1 Identification of Salmonella enterica ssp enterica using the VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry system. N. Reading, H.M. Kilgariff, N. Ratnaraja Department of Microbiology, Sandwell & West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, Birmingham, United Kingdom. OBJECTIVES The VITEK®MS (bioMérieux, France) is a recently launched MALDI-TOF MS system for rapid identification of bacterial and fungal isolates. Identification of Salmonella enterica ssp enterica within our laboratory has previously been carried out using biochemical and serological methods, with identification often being available 18-24 hours later. 1. Pick colony 2. Add to target slide 3. Add Matrix Our primary objective was to evaluate the performance of the VITEK® MS for the identification of Salmonella species including Salmonella typhi and Salmonella paratyphi. A second objective was to evaluate the identification achieved when isolates were tested direct from the selective medium, Xylose Lysine Desoxycholate Agar (X.L.D.) METHODS A total of 89 previously isolated, well characterised strains belonging to the Salmonella enterica ssp enterica group were tested on the VITEK® MS system. This comprised a total of 28 Salmonella typhi strains,19 strains of Salmonella paratyphi A. with the remaining strains made up of various Salmonella ssp. All strains had previously been identified using biochemical and serological methods. All isolates had been submitted for reference laboratory confirmation at HPA Centre for Infections, Colindale, UK. 4. Place in VITEK MS 5. Review results RESULTS Table of results Species Salmonella typhi Total Species Family Incorrect N° IDID StrainscorrectGroup identificationidentificationspecies group n=83correct 28 27 1 0 0 99.3% 100% Salmonella paratyphi A 19 14 5 0 0 73.7% 100% Salmonella species 40 1 0 1 95.2% 97.6% 42 35 (100%) isolates of Salmonella species tested directly for X.L.D. agar correctly identified as Salmonella Group. The previously isolated strains were cultured onto Columbia Horse Blood Agar (bioMérieux, France) prior to testing and incubated in air at 35oC for 24 hours. When combined, 123/124 (99.2%) isolates correctly identified to Salmonella group using the VITEK® MS. A further 35 strains of Salmonella ssp. were isolated on X.L.D. Agar (bioMérieux, France) as part of routine faeces processing and were tested direct from X.L.D. media on the VITEK® MS. These strains were referred to a reference laboratory for confirmation and typing. The identification of Salmonella species obtained using the VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF system was accurate when strains were tested directly from selective media, with 100% of isolates giving the correct identification. This provides considerable time savings compared to traditional methods. Disposable target slides (bioMérieux, France) were inoculated with a small amount of the test isolate to provide a thin layer of organism1 and overlaid with 1 µL of 𝛼-Cyano-4-hydroxy-cinnamic acid (C.H.C.A.) matrix solution (bioMérieux, France) and air dried1. The resulting slides were then processed in the VITEK® MS instrument with automatic database analysis of the obtained mass spectra within MYLA® software2 (bioMérieux, France). A second target spot was analysed if no spectra or identification was obtained. CONCLUSIONS Although the system failed to differentiate some organisms within the Salmonella Group, the given group identification proved to be correct and complementary serological methods should still be used to delineate Salmonella strains further. The VITEK® MS is a fast and reliable method that could replace traditional biochemical identification methods in routine clinical laboratories for the identification of Salmonella species. REFERENCES: 1. VITEK® MS User Manual, bioMérieux France 2011 2. MYLA® User Manual, bioMérieux France 2011 20 ➔ MICROBE / September, 2012 Sheffield (UK) VITEK® MS IVD V1 Identification of Streptococcus pneumoniae and Nonpneumococcal Streptococci of the Streptococcus mitis Group using the VITEK®MS MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry System. N. Reading, H.M. Kilgariff, N. Ratnaraja Department of Microbiology, Sandwell & West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, Birmingham United Kingdom. OBJECTIVES RESULTS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) is a rapid method for identification of microorganisms. Table of results The VITEK®MS (bioMérieux, France) is a recently launched MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry system for rapid identification of bacterial and fungal isolates. The identification of Streptococcus mitis Group members and differentiation of S. pneumoniae from other group members can be difficult using traditional methods and even when 16S Sequence based testing are considered3. Previous studies have shown mass spectrometry also had varying performance for the analysis of S. mitis Group streptococci4. Our objective was to evaluate the performance of the VITEK® MS in a routine clinical microbiology laboratory for the identification of Streptococcus pneumoniae and Non-pneumococcal streptococci belonging to the Streptococcus mitis Group. Total SpeciesFamily Incorrect N° IDID StrainscorrectGroup identificationidentificationspeciesgroup n=226correct S. pneumoniae 141 140 0 0 1 99.29% 9 9.29% S. oralis 44 0 43 1 0 0% 97.73% S. mitis 31 0 30 1 0 S. pseudo- pneumoniae 6 6 0 0 0 100% 100% S. cristatus 4 4 0 0 0 100% 100% 0% 96.77% Only 1 mucoid isolate of S.pneumoniae failed to identify even on repeated testing, with 99.29% of isolates being correctly identified by the VITEK® MS. 1 strain each of S.oralis and S.mitis misidentified as S.pneumoniae, further testing of each isolate showed the original identification to be correct. CONCLUSIONS METHODS 226 previously identified, well characterised strains belonging to the Streptococcus mitis Group (141 S. pneumoniae, 44 S. oralis , 31 S. mitis, 6 S. pseudopneumoniae and 4 S. cristatus), isolated between 2004 and 2012, were subcultured onto Columbia Horse Blood Agar (bioMérieux, France). Strains were grown at 37°C in 5% CO2 for 24 hours. Disposable target slides (bioMérieux, France) were inoculated with a small amount of a single bacterial colony to provide a thin layer of organism using a disposable plastic loop. These were overlaid with 1µL of α-Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (C.H.C.A) matrix solution (bioMérieux, France) and allowed to air dry.1 The resulting slides were then analysed in the VITEK® MS instrument, using the automatic database analysis of the obtained mass spectra within MYLA® software (bioMérieux, France) to provide isolate identification.2 A second target spot was analysed if no spectra or no identification was obtained. Discordant results were further analysed using susceptibility to EthylHydrocupreine (Optochin) (Thermo-Fisher Scientific, Basingstoke) and Bile Solubility using 10% Desoxycholate (Thermo-Fisher Scientific, Basingstoke) solution alongside the VITEK® 2 GP-ID Card (bioMérieux, France). 1. Pick colony Species 2. Add to target slide 3. Add Matrix The VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry system is a fast, reliable method to identify Streptococcus mitis Group streptococci with 98.67% of strains correctly identified to family/group level. Although the system failed to differentiate S. mitis and S.oralis, the given group identification or slash-line identification proved to be correct in the majority of organisms and alternative molecular methods often struggle to delineate these strains.3,4 Identification was available very rapidly, saving 24 hours in many cases when compared to traditional phenotypic or biochemical identification methods. REFERENCES: 1. VITEK® MS User Manual, bioMérieux, France 2011 2. MYLA® User Manual, bioMérieux, France 2011 3. Richard Facklam, Whatever Happened to the Streptococci. Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 2002, 15(4):613. 4. Christopher D. Doern et al. It’s not easy being green: The Viridans Group Streptococci J.Clin.Microbiol.2010,48(11):3829 4. Place in VITEK MS 5. Review results 21 ➔ ASM / June, 2012 San Francisco, USA Additional Research Capabilities on the VITEK® MS RUO Rapid Identification of Bacteria and Yeasts from Positive Blood Culture Bottles by Using a Lysis-Filtration Method and MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrum Analysis with SARAMIS Database. A. Fothergill1, V. Kasinathan1, J. Hyman2, J. Walsh2, T. Drake3, X. Huang3, E. M. Burd1, Y. F. Wang1,3; Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, 2bioMérieux, Inc., Durham, NC, 3Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, GA. 1 INTRODUCTION Rapid identification of bloodstream infections after a positive blood culture result would greatly improve patient care. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) can be used to identify (ID) microorganisms. The VITEK® MS RUO System with SARAMIS™ database by bioMérieux is a research use only MALDI-TOF MS system for rapid detection of bacterial and yeast isolates. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (MS) has the potential to serve as a fast and reliable method for identifying microorganisms. This study aims to evaluate the performance of a novel filtration-based method4 for processing positive BacT/ALERT® blood culture broth for immediate identification by MALDI-TOF MS. 1 μL of CHCA matrix. When a blood culture bottle was repeated, the volume of blood culture broth and corresponding buffers was doubled. All other procedures remained the same. SAMPLE PREPARATION Figure 1: Sample Preparation MATERIALS AND METHODS BacT/ALERT® anaerobic (SN) and standard aerobic (SA) noncharcoal based blood culture bottles that were flagged as positive by bioMérieux’s BacT/ALERT®3D system were included in the study. If possible, the bottles were processed the same day they flagged as positive, but older bottles were included as well. A bottle was considered to have a valid MALDI result if at least one spot gave a SARAMIS rating of 75% or more and other spots were not contradictory. Bottles that did not generate a MALDI ID on the first attempt were automatically repeated; other bottles, later found to have inconsistent results compared to VITEK® 2 results were repeated as well. If a bottle had inconsistent results but could not be repeated it was eliminated from consideration. If no MALDI ID was generated on initial testing, or if there was a discrepancy compared to the reference ID, a bottle was only processed two times. Both bottle types were processed identically. Samples and reagents were brought to room temperature before use. SAMPLE PREPARATION A 2.0 ml sample of positive blood culture broth was added to 1.0 ml of lysis buffer (0.6% Brij-97 in 0.4M CAPS, 0.2μ filtered, pH 11.7), vortexed for 5 seconds, and allowed to incubate for 2 minutes at room temperature. The resulting lysate was passed in a constant stream through a 25mm 0.45μm filter (Millipore Express PLUS®, shiny side down) for 40 seconds. If the liquid backed up, the sample addition was slowed in order to keep the sample application area to roughly 1 cm2. The microbial cells remaining on the filter membrane after 40 seconds were washed 3 times with wash buffer (20 mM Na phosphate, 0.05% Brij-97, 0.45% NaCl, 0.2μ filtered, pH 7.2) and then three times with deionized water. For each wash, enough buffer/water was added to the membrane to completely cover the membrane without flowing over. All liquid was allowed to pass through the membrane before subsequent washes. Once the microorganisms had been washed, they were removed by firmly scraping the membrane with a polyester fabric-tipped microswab (Texwipe CleanTips® Swabs, cat. No. TX754B). Organisms were then directly applied to disposable MALDI target plates (Shimadzu Biotech, cat. No. 220-99999-FM1) and immediately covered with 22 Figure 2: Lysate Application, Completed Spot for Analysis, and manifold and reservoir RESULTS A total of 259 bottles were included in the study, comprising 225 monomicrobic, 28 polymicrobic, and 6 that were negative on subculture. With all bottles included, the MALDI-TOF MS was able to identify 72.6% of positive-flagged cultures to the species level, 19.7% gave no ID, while 3.1% were incorrect (Table 2). There were 225 confirmed-positive bottles containing a single organism, and MALDI was able to identify 77.8% to the species level and 3 organisms (1.3%) were only identified to the genus level. 17.8% of bottles processed with a single organism present did not generate a MALDI ID, and 3.1% were incorrect (Table 1). Thus, for monomicrobic cultures, if MALDI was able to generate an ID (185) it was correct to the species level 94.6% of the time. Among monomicrobic cultures, 86.4% of gram negative bacteria, 75.8% of gram positive bacteria, and 88.2% of yeasts were correctly identified by MALDI to at least the family level (Table 3). Twenty-eight bottles had multiple organisms; one organism of the mixture in each of 13 bottles was identified to the species level (46.4%), and 3 were identified only to genus level (10.7%). Eleven bottles (39.3%) gave no MALDI ID, and 1 bottle had an incorrect result (3.6%). No more than one organism was identified from each bottle. Including both monomicrobic and polymicrobic cultures, when MALDI was able to generate an ID (202) it was correct to the species level 93.1% of the time, and 4.0% of IDs were incorrect. Rapid Identification of Bacteria and Yeats from Positive Blood Culture Bottles by Using a Lysis-Filtration Method and MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrum Analysis with SARAMIS Database. Table 1: Results of All Single-Organism Identifications Table 2: Results from all Positive Blood Culture Bottles Processed # Analyzed # Species ID consistent with referenceΔ # Genus ID consistent with reference # No MALDI ID # Incorrectv Staphylococcus (CNS)† 64 49Ғ 0 14 1 # Correct only to Genus/Family (%) Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) 23 22 0 0 1 # No MALDI ID, subculture positive (%) Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) 22 21 0 1 0 # No Growth and No MALDI ID (%) 6 (2.3) Escherichia coli 16 14Ғ 1 1 0 # Incorrect ID (%) 8 (3.1) Klebsiella pneumoniae 16 16 0 0 0 Streptococcus pneumoniae 11 2 0 9 0 Organism All Blood Culture Bottles # Correct Species (%) Acinetobacter baumannii 7 3 0 3 1 Candida parapsilosis 7 7 0 0 0 Candida albicans 6 5* 0 0 1 Streptococcus agalactiae 6 5 0 1 0 Corynebacterium 5 0 0 4 1 Enterococcus faecium 5 4Ғ 1 0 0 Total # Samples 188v (72.6) 6 (2.3) 51 (19.7) 259 Thirteen of these organisms were identified from bottles with multiple organisms to the species level. Two organisms were identified to the species level with “low discrimination”, (the MALDI gave multiple species results, one of which was correct). Fifty-three of these organisms were determined to have “essential agreement” to the species level. Organisms were considered to have “essential agreement” if the MALDI ID and conventional method were in agreement at the family and genus levels, but only the MALDI provided a species level identification v Table 3: Characteristics of Monomicrobic Positive Blood Culture Bottles Processed Candida glabrata 3 2 0 1 0 Enterobacter aerogenes 3 3 0 0 0 # Gram Negative bacteria 51/59 (86.4%) Enterobacter cloacae 3 2Ғ 1 0 0 # Gram Positive bacteria 113/149 (75.8%) Enterococcus faecalis 3 3 0 0 0 # Yeast Total # Samples Streptococcus, Viridans Group 3 2* 0 1 0 Haemophilus influenzae 2 1 0 1 0 Proteus mirabilis 2 2 0 0 0 Propionibacterium acnes 2 2Ғ 0 0 0 Salmonella sp 2 Ғ 2 0 0 0 Actinomyces meyer 1 0 0 1 0 Bacillus sp 1 0 0 1 0 0 Bacteroides fragilis 1 1 0 0 Candida sp 1 0 0 0 1 Candida tropicalis 1 1 0 0 0 Fusobacterium sp 1 1Ғ 0 0 0 Lactobacillus sp 1 0 0 1 0 Morganella morganii 1 0 0 0 1 Micrococcus sp 1 1Ғ 0 0 0 Psuedomonas sp 1 0 0 1 0 0 Psuedomonas aeruginosa 1 1 0 0 Serratia marcescens 1 1 0 0 0 Streptococcus, Group B 1 1Ғ 0 0 0 Streptococcus, Group G 1 1Ғ 0 0 0 3 (1.3) 40 (17.8) 7 (3.1) Total (%) 225 175 (77.8) Correct/Total (%) 15/17 (88.2%) 225 *organisms were counted as correct if they matched at family and genus levels. Organisms that had low discrimination or essential agreement were also included in the total correct. CONCLUSION This study demonstrates the effectiveness of this new Lysis- Filtration method for isolating and identifying microorganisms from positive BacT/ ALERT® blood culture bottles in a clinical setting. Approximately 80% of monomicrobic cultures were correctly identified. The differing levels of biomass within some positive blood cultures, as well as autolysis of some species, may contribute to the number of bottles that were unable to generate a MALDI result. The lysis buffer used eliminates blood cells while leaving microorganisms intact to undergo rapid analysis by MALDI-TOF MS. This method is advantageous as it does not require centrifugation and produces a clean, concentrated sample of microorganism in less than 15 minutes. Δ Reference ID consisted of routine laboratory workup, which was not to species level where indicated (see footnote Ғ) v Organism (MALDI-TOF ID): CNS (Micrococcus luteus), Staphylococcus aureus (Staphylococcus epidermidis), Acinetobacter baumannii (Klebsiella pneumoniae), Candida albicans (Moraxella catarrhalis), Corynebacterium (Propionibacerium acnes), Candida sp. (Pichia anomala), and Morganella morganii (Proteus mirabilis) † Two organisms identified as Staphylococcus hominis by conventional methods also included here * C. albicans includes1 correct to species with low discrimination. Viridans group Streptococci includes 2 correct with low discrimination Ғ 48 CNS, 2 Salmonella, and one each of all other noted organisms are in “essential agreement”. Organisms were considered to have “essential agreement” if the MALDI ID and conventional method were in agreement at the family and genus levels, but only the MALDI provided a species level identification 4 “PROCESSING OF POSITIVE BLOOD CULTURES WITH LYSIS-FILTRATION FOR DIRECT IDENTIFICATION BY MALDITOF MS”, bioMérieux research use only (RUO) protocol, February 13, 2012 23 ➔ ECCMID / April, 2012 London (UK) VITEK® MS IVD V1 Optimized integration of new technologies (PREVI® Isola and VITEK® MS ) in a microbiology laboratory using the Lean 6 Sigma methodology J. Collard1, G. Habib1, J. Djapo Tiani1, L. Van Helleputte2, H. Palumbo2. Laboratoire Dr. Collard, Liège, Belgium; 2bioMérieux Marcy-l’Etoile, France 1 INTRODUCTION Three steps were distinguished for this assessment: We are an important polyvalent private laboratory in Liege (Belgium) where the bacteriology department represents 25% of our sample volume (350 bacteriological samples/day). 1) Data collection: Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) were used in the lab, activity, type of sample sharing, positive ratio, daily arrival frequencies, TAT, staffing. Ten Full Time Equivalent (FTE) technicians (equivalent to 70 working hours per day) are in charge of this department, from the sorting task to the final validation. The laboratory is already automatized with two UF 500i + Aution Max for the urinary cytology and chemical tests, VITEK® 2 XL for identifications and susceptibility tests. We decided to bring to our lab the new available technologies to win even in efficiency and traceability: PREVI® Isola for automatic streaking and VITEK® MS for rapid Identification by mass spectrometry method. 2) Analyze the current situation with: Snapshot, photo, time to process, workload, bottlenecks, waiting time, layout with spaghetti diagram, productivity. 3) This analysis has led to a number of recommendations: • R eorganization of the workflow in functional working cells for day 0, day 1. It becomes more and more important to integrate them in the most efficient way. OBJECTIVES Our laboratory has decided to use the Lean 6 Sigma process prior to the implementation of new technologies. This new procedure is to analyze and propose an action plan and road map for: • A reduction of the non-added-value tasks in order to increase productivity, • Integrating the PREVI® Isola and the VITEK® MS in a pull and smoothed workflow, • Standardizing processes and methods for a streamlined workflow and a lead time reducing with 5S and kaizen events, • A new organization of the flow and processes, • Improvement of Turn-Around Time (TAT) using mass spectrometry for rapid identification, • A possible increase in activity with the same resources (space, FTE, instruments). Example: a dedicated trolley for PREVI® Isola METHODS, ANALYSIS AND RECOMMENDATIONS • Using First In First Out (FIFO) management, single piece flow, A performance assessment was performed during 5 days in February 2011 by a team specialized in Lean 6 Sigma methods: 1 Black belt external consultant plus 2 Green belt bioMérieux consultants. 24 • Adapt the good balance workload / workforce, •O rganize new events to put in place the new organization ➔ Change management (Lab performance improvement with KAIZEN and 5S events). Optimized integration of new technologies (PREVI® Isola and VITEK® MS ) in a microbiology laboratory using the Lean 6 Sigma methodology RESULTS CONCLUSION 1) Short term result obtained: 6 months after the laboratory workflow modification and installation of the new automated systems, the first conclusions show: • A reduction of TAT for the more complex samples, • A reduction of the workload and stress for laboratory technicians, • The ability to integrate 10% additional samples in the current organization, • The reallocation of a 1.5 FTE on dispatching tasks and on quality assurance, • A new lab layout Lean orientated. The integration of new technologies (mass spectrometry for rapid identification and automated plate streaking) utilizing the Lean 6 Sigma process enabled us to optimize the whole microbiology workflow. Day Zero Other This enabled us to also decrease the workload, the TAT, facilitate introduction of the accreditation process and handle an increased volume of samples. We were able to allocate staff in line with workload variations and build flexibility to manage an expected demands. The next step will be to put in place all the recommendations, the KPI (Key Performance Indicators) for the performance measurement, the training, and perform improvement events to achieve the middle and long term targets. New lab layout Lean oriented Day Zero Urine Day Zero Stool Incubator 2) Middle and Long Term Targets: The implementation of recommendations in terms of organization, automation and training, will allow the laboratory: • T o improve the productivity from 4.89 to 8.97 samples /working hour (83 % productivity savings), • T o reallocate 4 FTE to contain lab expenditure, to more added value tasks (Accreditation), or to improve profitability by an increased activity (50 %) with the same resources KPI productivity TARGET 8.97 samples/working hour KPI productivity CURRENT 4.89 samples/working hour • To reduce Turn-Around Time (TAT) 25 ➔ ECCMID / April, 2012 London (UK) VITEK® MS IVD V1 Rapid and accurate identification of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli isolates using the VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry system N. Reading, H.M. Kilgariff, N Ratnaraja Department of Microbiology, Sandwell & West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, Birmingham, United Kingdom OBJECTIVES RESULTS Within the genus Campylobacter, C. jejuni and C. coli are the main causes of human Campylobacter enteritis. Table of Results. In routine diagnostic laboratories, the differentiation of Campylobacter spp. can be a challenge due to their poor biochemical activity, resulting in many laboratories only reporting isolates to genus level. The objective of this study was to show the easy, rapid and accurate identification of enteritis causing Campylobacter species isolated from clinical samples using the recently launched VITEK® MS (bioMérieux, France) Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionisation Time of Flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry system. METHOD 98 previously identified strains of Campylobacter spp (49 Campylobacter coli and 49 Campylobacter jejuni), collected in 2010, were subcultured onto Charcoal Cefoperazone Deoxycholate Agar (C.C.D.A.) (bioMérieux, France). Strains were grown in micro-aerophilic conditions using the GENbox system (bioMérieux, France). 4 reference control strains were included, NCTC 11322, ATCC 33560 (C. jejuni) and NCTC 11366, ATCC 33559 (C. coli). Disposable target slides (bioMérieux, France) were inoculated with a small amount of a single bacterial colony to provide a thin layer of organism using a disposable plastic loop1. This was then overlaid with 1μL of C.H.C.A. matrix solution (bioMérieux, France) and allowed to air dry1. The resulting slides were then analysed in the VITEK® MS (bioMérieux, France) instrument, using the automatic database analysis of the obtained mass spectra within MYLA® (bioMérieux, France) software to provide isolate identification1. A second target spot was analysed if no spectra or no identification was obtained. 1. Pick colony 2. Add to target slide 4. Place in VITEK MS 26 3. Add Matrix 5. Review results Total Strains Species ID correct Campylobacter jejuni 49 49 Campylobacter coli 49 49 Totals 98 98 The results showed that the MALDI -TOF MS was correct in 100% of the identifications for all 98 strains, including all reference strains. The complete identification of all 98 strains was available in under 90 minutes. CONCLUSIONS The VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF system provides an easy, accurate and importantly rapid identification of the two common enteritis causing strains of Campylobacter species. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry provides an accurate alternative to traditional identification methods. REFERENCES: 1. VITEK® MS User Manual, bioMérieux, France 2011 ➔ ECCMID / April, 2012 London (UK) VITEK® MS IVD V1 Evaluation of the VITEK® MS MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry system in a routine clinical laboratory. N. Reading, A.Dadrah, A.Symonds, H.M. Kilgariff, N Ratnaraja Department of Microbiology, Sandwell & West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, Birmingham, United Kingdom OBJECTIVES RESULTS Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) is a rapid method for identification of microorganisms. The VITEK® MS (bioMérieux, France) is a recently launched MALDI-TOF MS system for rapid identification of bacterial and yeast isolates. Our objective was to evaluate the performance of the VITEK® MS in a routine clinical microbiology laboratory across a wide range of bacteria and yeasts. METHODS A total of 617 previously isolated, well characterised strains were tested on the VITEK® MS system. This comprised a total of 40 different genera and 111 individual species. 55 were reference strains obtained from ATCC or NCTC collections. Strains were cultured onto non-selective media considered suitable for normal growth. Disposable target slides (bioMérieux, France) were inoculated with a small amount of test isolate to provide a thin layer of organism1. Yeast strains were overlaid with 0.5μL of Formic Acid (bioMérieux, France), air dried and further overlaid with 1μL of C.H.C.A. matrix solution (bioMérieux, France) and air dried1. Bacterial isolates were overlaid with 1μL of C.H.C.A. matrix solution and allowed to air dry1. The resulting slides were then processed in the VITEK® MS instrument with automatic database analysis of the obtained mass spectra within MYLA® software2 (bioMérieux, France). A second target spot was analysed if no spectra or identification was obtained. Discordant isolates were subsequently identified on a VITEK® 2 (bioMérieux, France) system or by using extended phenotypic methods and were considered to be the reference identification. Table of results Total Total Species ID Family/ Genus ID Mis- No Strains Species correctGroupcorrectIdentified identification ID Correct Enterobacteriaceae121 19 103 121 121 Non Fermenting Gram Negative 101 16 96 96 100 1 Bacilli Staphylococci 11210 112 112 112 Streptococci 80 18767878 2 Enterococci 607 60 60 60 HACEK Group 29 4 29 29 29 Neisseria 135 13 13 13 Moraxella 173 17 17 17 Anaerobes 24 101919221 1 Yeasts 30 9292929 1 Miscellaneous30 10252727 3 TOTALS 617 111579601608 1 8 579 out of 617 (93.8%) isolates gave a good identification to species level. 601 out of 617 (97.4%) isolates gave an identification to group level. Finally, 608/617 (98.5%) isolates gave a correct genus level identification. The remaining 9 isolates failed to identify or gave an incorrect identification profile even after multiple testing and subculture onto alternative media. CONCLUSIONS The VITEK® MS MALDI TOF mass spectrometry system is a fast, reliable method to identify clinically relevant bacterial and yeast isolates. Identification was available very rapidly, saving 24 hours in many cases when compared to traditional phenotypic or biochemical identification methods. Although the system failed to differentiate some organisms within the same group e.g. S.mitis and S.oralis, the given group identification or slash-line identification proved to be correct and alternative molecular methods often struggle to delineate these strains.3 1. Pick colony 4. Add Matrix 2. Add to target slide 5. Place in VITEK MS 3. Add Formic Acid (Yeasts) 6. Review results Mass spectrometry is a reliable method to replace traditional bacterial identification methods in routine clinical laboratories. REFERENCES: 1. VITEK® MS User Manual, bioMérieux, France 2011 2. MYLA® User Manual, bioMérieux, France 2011 3. Richard Facklam, 2002, Whatever Happened to the Streptococci: Overview of Taxonomic and Nomenclature Changes.Clin. Microbiol. Rev. 2002, 15(4):613. 27 ➔ ECCMID / April, 2012 London (UK) Additional Research Capabilities on the VITEK® MS RUO Clinical Testing of Bacteria and Yeast from Pediatric Patients by Using MALDI-TOF VITEK® MS System V. Kasinathan1, X. Zheng2, A. Fothergill1, D. Carter2, Y.F. Wang1 1 Emory University & Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, GA, USA; 2 Northwestern University & Children’s Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL, USA ABSTRACT Clinical isolates including yeasts and bacteria from two children’s hospitals were used for testing by using the VITEK® MS System. The results generated from MALDI-TOF MS that gave the definitive identification to genus level were used for comparison with results from conventional culture methods and additional 16S rDNA sequencing methods for challenging organisms. Non-duplicated clinical isolates including isolates from two children’s hospitals, were collected from blood, spinal fluid, respiratory, wound, stool, and urine cultures, and were used for MALDI-TOF MS testing. With the exception of Shigella isolates, the clinical testing data demonstrate the capability of MALDI-TOF VITEK® MS method in correct and rapid identification of pathogenic bacteria and yeasts in pediatric patient populations. Table 1 Conventional Culture Media MALDI-TOF MS genus No. species MRSA Staphylococcus aureus 7 S. aureus Staphylococcus aureus 7 S. agalactiae Streptococcus agalactiae 7 E. faecalis Enterococcus faecalis 5 E. coli Escherichia coli 4 P. aeruginosa Pseudomonas aeruginosa 3 S. pyogenes Streptococcus pyogenes 3 E. faecium, VRE Enterococcus faecium 2 H. influenzae Haemophilus influenzae 2 BACKGROUND Salmonella sp Salmonella sp. 2 Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-off-light mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) can be used to detect microorganisms rapidly from culture isolates. S. marcescens Serratia marcescens 2 S. pneumoniae Streptococcus mitis/oralis/ pneumoniae 2 VITEK® MS System with SARAMIS database by bioMerieux is a commercially available MALDI-TOF MS system for rapid detection of bacterial and yeast isolates. A. baumannii Acinetobacter baumannii 1 C. parasilopsis Candida parapsilosis 1 E. cloacae Enterobacter cloacae 1 E. avium Enterococcus avium 1 This study is designed to use the VITEK® MS to detect clinical isolates from pediatric patients seen in one children’s hospital in the Southeast and another in Midwest of United States. KP ESBL Klebsiella pneumoniae 1 METHODS P. mirabilis Proteus mirabilis 1 Clinical isolates including yeasts and bacteria from two children’s hospitals were used for testing by using the VITEK® MS System. The results generated from MALDI-TOF MS that gave the definitive identification to genus level were used for comparison with results from conventional culture methods and additional 16S rDNA sequencing methods for challenging organisms. P. fluorescens/putida group Pseudomonas putida 1 S. pyogenes Streptococcus mitis/oralis/ pseudopneumoniae 1 Salmonella species Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica 8 RESULTS S. sonnei Escherichia coli 11 Total of 137 non-duplicated clinical isolates including 73 isolated from one hospital (Table 1) and 64 isolated from another one (Table 2) were collected from blood, spinal fluid, respiratory, wound, stool, and urine cultures, and were used for MALDI-TOF MS testing. Total Of 64 isolates including 9 challenging organisms, only 2 organisms could not be further identified at species level. Among 73 isolates tested, 62 were routine isolates and 11 were Shigella isolates. Of 62 isolates, only 1 Streptococcus pyogenes from throat culture was identified as S. mitis, though similar isolates from other patients were identified correctly. Among 11 Shigella isolates tested, all were misidentified as E. coli, which was consistent with 12 isolates from adult patients. 28 73 Clinical Testing of Bacteria and Yeast from Pediatric Patients by Using MALDI-TOF VITEK® MS System Table 2 Conventional Culture Media MALDI-TOF MS genus No. species E. coli Escherichia coli 13 S. aureus Staphylococcus aureus 13 P. aeruginosa Pseudomonas aeruginosa 7 E. cloacae Enterobacter cloacae 4 K. pneumoniae Klebsiella pneumoniae 4 P. mirabilis Proteus mirabilis 3 S. epidermidis Staphylococcus epidermidis 3 S. marscescens Serratia marcescens 3 A. xylosoxidans Achromobacter alcaligenaceae 2 A. xylosoxidans Achromobacter sp. 1 B. bronchiseptica Bordetella bronchiseptica/ parapertussis/pertussis 1 Diphtheroides Corynebacterium amycolatum/striatum 1 E. cloacae Enterobacter sp. 1 E. faecalis Enterococcus faecalis 1 K. oxytoca Klebsiella oxytoca 1 Micrococcus sp Micrococcus luteus 1 MRSA Staphylococcus aureus 1 S. saprophyticus Staphylococcus saprophyticus 1 S. maltophilia Stenotrophomonas maltophilia 1 S. mitis / oralis Streptococcus mitis/oralis/ pseudopneumoniae 1 S. anginosus Group Streptococcus sanguinis 1 Total 64 CONCLUSION With the exception of Shigella isolates, the clinical testing data demonstrate the capability of MALDI-TOF VITEK® MS method in correct and rapid identification of pathogenic bacteria and yeasts in pediatric patient populations. 29 04-13 / 9305156 010/GB/A / This document is not legally binding. bioMérieux reserves the right to modify specifications without notice / BIOMERIEUX, the blue logo, API, BacT/ALERT, Myla, PREVI, SARAMIS and VITEK are used, pending and/or registered trademarks belonging to bioMérieux or one of its subsidiaries or one of its companies / Any other name or trademark is the property of its respective owner / Photos: M. 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