US Clinical Breakpoint Updates: Closing the Gap Between Revision and Laboratory Implementation
A survey found that up to 70% of CAP-accredited US laboratories use obsolete clinical breakpoints for antimicrobial susceptibility reporting, creating patient safety risks. This review summarises the CLSI breakpoint-setting process, identifies barriers to timely adoption, and proposes solutions including regulatory reform, MIC-only reporting, education, and greater stakeholder dialogue.
The original study
Updating breakpoints in the United States: a summary from the ASM Clinical Microbiology Open 2022.
- Authors
- Patel JB, Alby K, Humphries R, Weinstein M, Lutgring JD, Naccache SN, et al.
- Journal
- Journal of clinical microbiology
- Type
- Journal Article, Review
- PMID
- 37791777
Original abstract
Accurate antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) and reporting are essential for guiding appropriate therapy for patients and direction for public health prevention and control actions. A critical feature of AST reporting is the interpretation of AST results using clinical breakpoints for reporting as susceptible, susceptible-dose dependent, intermediate, or resistant. Breakpoints are subject to continuous adjustment and updating to best reflect current clinical data. These breakpoint changes can benefit patients and public health only if adopted in a timely manner. A recent survey identified that up to 70% of College of American Pathologists (CAP)-accredited U.S. laboratories and 45% of CAP-accredited laboratories outside the U.S. use various obsolete clinical breakpoints to interpret AST results to guide patient care. The reason for the ongoing use of obsolete breakpoints is multifactorial, including barriers encountered by laboratories, commercial AST device manufacturers, standards development organizations, and regulatory bodies alike. To begin to address this important patient safety issue, CAP implemented checklist requirements for CAP-accredited laboratories to ensure up-to-date clinical breakpoint use. Furthermore, the topic was discussed at the June 2022 American Society for Microbiology Clinical Microbiology Open (CMO) with various stakeholders to identify potential solutions. This minireview summarizes the breakpoint setting process in the U.S. and highlights solutions to close the gap between breakpoint revisions and implementation in clinical and public health laboratories. Solutions discussed include clarification of data requirements and minimum inhibitory concentration only reporting for regulatory clearance of AST devices, clinical data generation to close breakpoints gaps, advocacy, education, and greater dialogue between stakeholders.