Automated Detection of Toxigenic Clostridium difficile in Clinical Samples: Isothermal tcdB Amplification Coupled to Array-Based Detection

Author:

Hicke Brian1,Pasko Chris1,Groves Benjamin1,Ager Edward2,Corpuz Maylene1,Frech Georges1,Munns Denton1,Smith Wendy1,Warcup Ashley1,Denys Gerald3,Ledeboer Nathan A.4,Lindsey Wes1,Owen Charles1,Rea Larry1,Jenison Robert1

Affiliation:

1. Great Basin Scientific, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

2. Clinical Microbiology-Immunology Laboratories, University of North Carolina Hospitals, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA

3. Indiana University Health, University Hospital, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA

4. Medical College of Wisconsin, Department of Pathology, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Clostridium difficile can carry a genetically variable pathogenicity locus (PaLoc), which encodes clostridial toxins A and B. In hospitals and in the community at large, this organism is increasingly identified as a pathogen. To develop a diagnostic test that combines the strengths of immunoassays (cost) and DNA amplification assays (sensitivity/specificity), we targeted a genetically stable PaLoc region, amplifying tcdB sequences and detecting them by hybridization capture. The assay employs a hot-start isothermal method coupled to a multiplexed chip-based readout, creating a manual assay that detects toxigenic C. difficile with high sensitivity and specificity within 1 h. Assay automation on an electromechanical instrument produced an analytical sensitivity of 10 CFU (95% probability of detection) of C. difficile in fecal samples, along with discrimination against other enteric bacteria. To verify automated assay function, 130 patient samples were tested: 31/32 positive samples (97% sensitive; 95% confidence interval [CI], 82 to 99%) and 98/98 negative samples (100% specific; 95% CI, 95 to 100%) were scored correctly. Large-scale clinical studies are now planned to determine clinical sensitivity and specificity.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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