Affiliation:
1. Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The Phoenix 100 ID/AST system (Becton Dickinson Co., Sparks, Md.) is an automated system for the identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing of bacterial isolates. This system with its negative identification (NID) panel was evaluated for its accuracy in the identification of 507 isolates of the family
Enterobacteriaceae
, 57 other nonenteric gram-negative isolates that are commonly isolated in clinical microbiology laboratories, and 138 isolates of the family
Vibrionaceae
. All of the isolates had been characterized by using approximately 48 conventional tube biochemicals. Of the 507 isolates of the
Enterobacteriaceae
, 456 (89.9%) were correctly identified to the genus and species levels. The five isolates of
Proteus penneri
required an off-line indole test, as suggested by the system to differentiate them from
Proteus vulgaris
. The identifications of 20 (3.9%) isolates were correct to the genus level but incorrect at the species level. Two (0.4%) isolates were reported as “no identification.” Misidentifications to the genus and species levels occurred for 29 (5.7%) isolates of the
Enterobacteriaceae
. These incorrect identifications were spread over 14 different genera. The most common error was the misidentification of
Salmonella
species. The shortest time for a correct identification was 2 h 8 min. The longest time was 12 h 27 min, for the identification of a
Serratia marcescens
isolate. Of the 57 isolates of nonenteric gram-negative bacilli (
Acinetobacter
,
Aeromonas
,
Burkholderia
,
Plesiomonas
,
Pseudomonas
, and
Stenotrophomonas
spp.), 48 (84.2%) were correctly identified to the genus and species levels and 7 (12.3%) were correctly identified to the genus level but not to the species level. The average time for a correct identification was 5 h 11 min. Of the
Vibrionaceae
spp., 123 (89.1%) were correctly identified at the end of the initial incubation period, which averaged 4 h. Based on the findings of this study, the Phoenix 100 ID/AST system NID panel falls short of being an acceptable new method for the identification of the
Enterobacteriaceae
,
Vibrionaceae
, and gram-negative nonenteric isolates that are commonly encountered in many hospital microbiology laboratories.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Reference11 articles.
1. Comparative Evaluation of the BD Phoenix and VITEK 2 Automated Instruments for Identification of Isolates of the
Burkholderia cepacia
Complex
2. Identification of the Emerging Pathogen
Vibrio vulnificus
Biotype 3 by Commercially Available Phenotypic Methods
3. Evaluation of the Automated Phoenix System for Potential Routine Use in the Clinical Microbiology Laboratory
4. Edwards P. R. and W. H. Ewing. 1972. Identification of Enterobacteriaceae 3rd ed. Burgess Publishing Co. Minneapolis Minn.
5. Endimiani, A., F. Luzzaro, A. Tamborini, G. Lombardi, V. Elia, R. Belloni, and A. Toniolo. 2002. Identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing of clinical isolates of nonfermenting gram-negative bacteria by the Phoenix automated microbiology system. Microbiologica25:323-329.
Cited by
33 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献