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Título

Role of inoculum and mutant frequency on fosfomycin MIC discrepancies by agar dilution and broth microdilution methods in Enterobacteriaceae

AutorBallestero-Téllez, Mónica; Docobo-Pérez, Fernando CSIC ORCID; Rodríguez-Martínez, José-Manuel CSIC ORCID; Conejo, M. Carmen; Ramos-Guelfo, M. S.; Blázquez Gómez, Jesús CSIC ORCID; Rodríguez-Baño, Jesús CSIC ORCID; Pascual Bravo, Alberto CSIC ORCID
Palabras claveBacterial subpopulation
Fosfomycin
Heteroresistance
Mutant frequency
Susceptibility test
Fecha de publicaciónmay-2017
EditorElsevier
CitaciónClinical Microbiology and Infection 23(5): 325-331 (2017)
Resumen[Objectives] Fosfomycin is re-evaluated as a treatment of multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae infections. However, MIC differences have been described among the different susceptibility testing. The aim was to study the role of the different inoculum size used in agar dilution with respect to broth microdilution, according to CLSI, in the fosfomycin MIC discrepancies.
[Methods] Fosfomycin MICs were determined using agar dilution (reference) and broth microdilution in 220 Escherichia coli (n = 81) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (n = 139) clinical isolates. Fosfomycin mutant frequencies were determined in 21 E. coli (MIC = 1 mg/L) and 21 K. pneumoniae (MIC = 16 mg/L). The emergence of resistant subpopulations of five E. coli strains (MIC = 1 mg/L) was monitored over the time by microdilution assay using 0, 4 and 8 mg/L of fosfomycin, and eight different inocula (5 × 105−3.91 × 103 CFU/well, 1 : 2 dilutions).
[Results] For E. coli, 86.4% of categorical agreement (CA), 9.1% very major errors (VME), 3.3% major errors (ME) and 9.9% minor errors (mE) were found. For K. pneumoniae, CA was 51.1%, VME 15.7%, ME 28.4% and mE 25.2%. Essential agreement (±1–log2) was observed in 55.45%. By microdilution, 35.9% of the MICs showed discrepancies of ≥2 dilutions. Initial inoculum used was 5.63 times higher in the microdilution method, in range with CLSI methodology for both techniques. Fosfomycin mutant frequencies were 6.05 × 10–5 (4 × MIC) to 5.59 × 10–7 (256 × MIC) for E. coli, and 1.49 × 10–4 (4 × MIC) to 1.58 × 10–5 (16 × MIC) for K. pneumoniae. Resistant subpopulations arose mainly after 8 h of incubation with inocula >3.13 × 104 CFU/well.
[Conclusions] The higher inoculum used in the microdilution method enriched the initial inoculum with resistant subpopulations and could partially explain the fosfomycin MIC discrepancies with respect to the agar dilution method.
Versión del editorhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmi.2016.12.022
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/200179
DOI10.1016/j.cmi.2016.12.022
Identificadoresdoi: 10.1016/j.cmi.2016.12.022
issn: 1198-743X
e-issn: 1469-0691
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