The etiologic diagnosis of infectious discitis is improved by amplification-based DNA analysis
✍ Scribed by Frédéric Lecouvet; Leonid Irenge; Bernard Vandercam; Adrien Nzeusseu; Sandrine Hamels; Jean-Luc Gala
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 219 KB
- Volume
- 50
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-3591
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objective
Blood cultures and cultures of disc material are required to identify and treat bacterial agents responsible for septic spondylodiscitis, but these methods have limited sensitivities. We undertook this study to compare nonculture amplification‐based DNA analysis with conventional culture of disc aspirate.
Methods
Nineteen patients with spondylodiscitis, including 11 with a history of spinal surgery, presented with negative blood cultures and underwent percutaneous disc or epidural abscess puncture for bacterial diagnosis. Amplification by polymerase chain reaction was performed on 16S ribosomal DNA universal target genes and femA staphylococci‐specific target genes in all patients, and on the upstream p34 mycobacterial gene in 1 patient. Species identification relied on amplicon sequencing and comparison with templates from GenBank. Amplification of the femA gene led to subsequent testing for methicillin resistance by amplification of the mecA gene. Further assessment using a staphylococci‐ and methicillin resistance–specific DNA array was performed on 3 samples.
Results
Microbiologic and molecular assays identified the causative organism in 14 of 19 patients (74%) and 19 of 19 patients (100%), respectively. In culture‐positive patients, DNA‐based and microbiologic results were highly correlated. Five agents (Staphylococcus simulans, Staphylococcus sciuri, Brucella species, Actinomyces israelii, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex) were identified only by DNA‐based methods. In 1 sample, Corynebacterium jeikeium and coagulase‐negative Staphylococcus were both cultured, whereas DNA analysis identified only Staphylococcus hominis.
Conclusion
DNA‐based methods are highly sensitive and specific. They can usefully complement standard microbiologic methods for identifying the cause of infectious spondylodiscitis and contribute to species‐specific therapeutic orientation in patients with negative blood and disc aspirate cultures.
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