A Test for the Rapid Detection of the cefazolin Inoculum Effect in Methicillin-Susceptible Staphylococcus aureus

Rincon, Sandra; Carvajal, Lina P.; Gomez-Villegas, Sara, I; Echeverri, Aura M.; Rios, Rafael; An Dinh; Pedroza, Claudia; Ordonez, Karen M.; Nannini, Esteban; Sun, Zhizeng; Fowler, Vance G.; Murray, Barbara E.; Miller, William R.; Palzkill, Timothy; Diaz, Lorena; et. al.

Abstract

The cefazolin inoculum effect (CzIE) has been associated with therapeutic failures and mortality in invasive methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) infections. A diagnostic test to detect the CzIE is not currently available. We developed a rapid (similar to 3 h) CzIE colorimetric test to detect staphylococcal-beta-lactamase (BlaZ) activity in supematants after ampicillin induction. The test was validated using 689 bloodstream MSSA isolates recovered from Latin America and the United States. The cefazolin MIC determination at a high inoculum (10(7) CFU/ml) was used as a reference standard (cutoff >= 16 mu g/ml). All isolates underwent genome sequencing. A total of 257 (373%) of MSSA isolates exhibited the CzIE by the reference standard method. The overall sensitivity and specificity of the colorimetric test was 82.5% and 88.9% respectively. Sensitivity in MSSA isolates harboring type A BlaZ (the most efficient enzyme against cefazolin) was 92.7% with a specificity of 87.8%. The performance of the test was lower against type B and C enzymes (sensitivities of 533% and 723%, respectively). When the reference value was set to >= 32 mu g/ml, the sensitivity for isolates carrying type A enzymes was 982%. Specificity was 100% for MSSA lacking blaZ. The overall negative predictive value ranged from 81.4% to 95.6% in Latin American countries using published prevalence rates of the CzIE. MSSA isolates from the United States were genetically diverse, with no distinguishing genomic differences from Latin American MSSA, distributed among 18 sequence types. A novel test can readily identify most MSSA isolates exhibiting the CzIE, particularly those carrying type A BlaZ. In contrast to the MIC determination using high inoculum, the rapid test is inexpensive, feasible, and easy to perform. After minor validation steps, it could be incorporated into the routine clinical laboratory workflow.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000631260500030 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volumen: 59
Número: 4
Editorial: AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
Fecha de publicación: 2021
DOI:

10.1128/JCM.01938-20

Notas: ISI