The effect of antibiotic exposure and specimen volume on the detection of bacterial pathogens in children with pneumonia

Amanda J. Driscoll, Maria Deloria Knoll, Laura L. Hammitt, Henry C. Baggett, W. Abdullah Brooks, Daniel R. Feikin, Karen L. Kotloff, Orin S. Levine, Shabir A. Madhi, Katherine L. O'Brien, J. Anthony G. Scott, Donald M. Thea, Stephen R.C. Howie, Peter V. Adrian, Dilruba Ahmed, Andrea N. DeLuca, Bernard E. Ebruke, Caroline Gitahi, Melissa M. Higdon, Anek KaewpanAngela Karani, Ruth A. Karron, Razib Mazumder, Jessica McLellan, David P. Moore, Lawrence Mwananyanda, Daniel E. Park, Christine Prosperi, Julia Rhodes, Md Saifullah, Phil Seidenberg, Samba O. Sow, Boubou Tamboura, Scott L. Zeger, David R. Murdoch, Nicholas Fancourt, Wei Fu, E. Wangeci Kagucia, Mengying Li, Zhenke Wu, Nora L. Watson, Jane Crawley, Hubert P. Endtz, Khalequ Zaman, Doli Goswami, Lokman Hossain, Yasmin Jahan, Hasan Ashraf, Martin Antonio, Alice Kamau

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

71 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background. Antibiotic exposure and specimen volume are known to affect pathogen detection by culture. Here we assess their effects on bacterial pathogen detection by both culture and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in children. Methods. PERCH (Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health) is a case-control study of pneumonia in children aged 1-59 months investigating pathogens in blood, nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal (NP/OP) swabs, and induced sputum by culture and PCR. Antibiotic exposure was ascertained by serum bioassay, and for cases, by a record of antibiotic treatment prior to specimen collection. Inoculated blood culture bottles were weighed to estimate volume. Results. Antibiotic exposure ranged by specimen type from 43.5% to 81.7% in 4223 cases and was detected in 2.3% of 4863 controls. Antibiotics were associated with a 45% reduction in blood culture yield and approximately 20% reduction in yield from induced sputum culture. Reduction in yield of Streptococcus pneumoniae from NP culture was approximately 30% in cases and approximately 32% in controls. Several bacteria had significant but marginal reductions (by 5%-7%) in detection by PCR in NP/OP swabs from both cases and controls, with the exception of S. pneumoniae in exposed controls, which was detected 25% less frequently compared to nonexposed controls. Bacterial detection in induced sputum by PCR decreased 7% for exposed compared to nonexposed cases. For every additional 1 mL of blood culture specimen collected, microbial yield increased 0.51% (95% confidence interval, 0.47%-0.54%), from 2% when volume was ≤1 mL to approximately 6% for ≥3 mL. Conclusions. Antibiotic exposure and blood culture volume affect detection of bacterial pathogens in children with pneumonia and should be accounted for in studies of etiology and in clinical management.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)S368-S377
JournalClinical Infectious Diseases
Volume64
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Antibiotic exposure
  • Blood culture
  • Children
  • Pneumonia

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