Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Bacteriology, Huddinge University Hospital, SE-141 86 Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A screening method for methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) by using selective broth and real-time PCR (broth-PCR) was developed and evaluated. The samples (
n
= 304) were cultured in the broth overnight, followed by
nuc
gene detection by real-time PCR.
nuc
-negative samples were further checked for the presence of
nuc
amplification inhibitors by a PCR internal inhibitor assay.
nuc
-positive samples and
nuc
-negative samples with PCR inhibitors were cultured onto plates and processed further. The diagnostic values for this MRSA screening method were 93.3% sensitivity, 89.6% specificity, 31.8% positive predictive value, and 99.6% negative predictive value. The application of the broth-PCR method will be able to report most of the negative samples (258 of 289 [89.3%]) on the next morning and can save as much as 84.9% (258 of 304) of the labor and cost spent on processing the
nuc
-negative specimens on plates. In the study, all the samples were processed in parallel by the broth enrichment method and the plating method for comparison. To identify MRSA, the isolated oxacillin-resistant
S. aureus
strains were tested by a duplex real-time PCR targeting the
mecA
gene and the
nuc
gene. A collection of MRSA, methicillin-susceptible
Staphylococcus aureus
, methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus epidermidis
, and methicillin-susceptible
Staphylococcus epidermidis
strains and a panel of standard strains of 11 bacterial species other than
S. aureus
were also tested by this method, which was proved to be a valuable tool for MRSA identification in a routine microbiological laboratory.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology