Affiliation:
1. Infectious Diseases
2. Microbiology Departments, Austin Health
3. Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne
4. Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We assessed the sensitivities and specificities of three previously described PCR primers on enrichment broth cultures of feces for the accurate detection of fecal carriage of vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE). In addition, we investigated specimens that were
vanB
PCR positive but VRE culture negative for the presence of other
vanB
-containing pathogens. Feces from 59 patients (12 patients carrying
vanB Enterococcus faecium
strains and 47 patients negative for VRE carriage) were cultured for 36 h in aerobic brain heart infusion (BHI) broth, anaerobic BHI (AnO
2
BHI) broth, or aerobic Enterococcosel (EC) broth. DNA was extracted from the cultures and tested for the presence of
vanB
by using the PCR primers of Dutka-Malen et al. (S. Dutka-Malen, S. Evers, and P. Courvalin, J. Clin. Microbiol. 33:24-27, 1995), Bell et al. (J. M. Bell, J. C. Paton, and J. Turnidge, J. Clin. Microbiol. 36:2187-2190, 1998), and Stinear et al. (T. P. Stinear, D. C. Olden, P. D. R. Johnson, J. K. Davies, and M. L. Grayson, Lancet 357:855-856, 2001). The sensitivity (specificity) of PCR compared with the results of culture on BHI, AnO
2
BHI, and EC broths were 67% (96%), 50% (94%), and 17% (100%), respectively, with the primers of Dutka-Malen et al.; 92% (60%), 92% (45%), and 92% (83%), respectively, with the primers of Bell et al.; and 92% (49%), 92% (43%), and 100% (51%) respectively, with the primers of Stinear et al. The primers of both Bell et al. and Stinear et al. were significantly more sensitive than those of Dutka-Malen et al. in EC broth (
P
= 0.001 and
P
< 0.001, respectively). The poor specificities for all primer pairs were due in part to the isolation and identification of six anaerobic gram-positive bacilli,
Clostridium hathewayi
(
n
= 3), a
Clostridium innocuum
-like organism (
n
= 1),
Clostridium bolteae
(
n
= 1), and
Ruminococcus lactaris
-like (
n
= 1), from five fecal specimens that were
vanB
positive but VRE culture negative. All six organisms were demonstrated to contain a
vanB
gene identical to that of VRE.
VanB-
containing bowel anaerobes may result in false-positive interpretation of PCR-positive fecal enrichment cultures as VRE, regardless of the primers and protocols used.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology