Molecular Dx Significance 7/10

Phenotypic Assays for Carbapenemase Detection: A Practical Laboratory Review

This review evaluates the phenotypic methods available for detecting carbapenemase-producing organisms in clinical microbiology laboratories, including growth-based assays, hydrolysis methods such as Carba NP and MALDI-TOF MS, and lateral flow immunoassays. Identifying the specific carbapenemase class has direct therapeutic implications as newer agents show differential activity. The authors provide practical guidance for laboratories of all sizes seeking affordable, accurate CPO detection to support both treatment decisions and infection control.

The original study

Phenotypic Detection of Carbapenemase-Producing Organisms from Clinical Isolates.

Authors
Tamma PD, Simner PJ
Journal
Journal of clinical microbiology
Type
Journal Article, Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural, Review
PMID
30158194
Read the original study →

Original abstract

The rapid spread of multidrug-resistant Gram-negative organisms constitutes one of the greatest challenges to global health. While Gram-negative organisms have developed several mechanisms to avert the bactericidal effects of commonly prescribed antibiotic agents, the increasing prevalence of carbapenemase-producing organisms (CPO) is particularly concerning given the rapid spread of mobile genetic elements containing carbapenemase genes, the limited treatment options for infections caused by these organisms, and the high mortality rates associated with CPO infections. Understanding if an organism is carbapenemase producing and, if so, the class of carbapenemase(s) produced has treatment implications, as some agents preferentially have activity against specific carbapenemases. Furthermore, CPO disseminate between patients with greater ease than non-CP-carbapenem-resistant organisms and warrant more intensive infection control measures than would be employed in the absence of carbapenemase production. Phenotypic assays currently used in clinical practice to detect CPO consist of the following: (i) growth-based assays which measure carbapenem resistance based on organism growth in the presence of a carbapenem antibiotic (e.g., modified Hodge test and modified carbapenem inactivation method), (ii) hydrolysis methods which detect carbapenem degradation products (e.g., Carba NP test and matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization time of flight mass spectrometry), and (iii) lateral flow immunoassays which detect carbapenemase enzymes through the use of specific antibodies. Although there is no single phenotypic test that meets all specifications of the ideal test, as we describe in this review, there are a number of tests that are user-friendly, affordable, accurate, and feasible for implementation in clinical microbiology laboratories of all sizes.