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Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing

Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing

Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing

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AST Foundations - Sizing Up The Bugs

  • Purpose: Guides therapy, tracks resistance.
  • MIC (Minimum Inhibitory Concentration): Lowest drug level preventing visible growth. 📌 MIC 'Inhibits'.

    ⭐ The MIC is the lowest concentration of an antimicrobial that prevents visible growth of a microorganism after overnight incubation.

  • MBC (Minimum Bactericidal Concentration): Lowest drug level killing 99.9% of bacteria. 📌 MBC 'Kills'.
  • Breakpoints (CLSI/EUCAST): Standardized values defining S/I/R categories.
CategoryInterpretation
S (Susceptible)Therapy likely effective.
I (Intermediate)Uncertain success; dose ↑ or site-specific use.
R (Resistant)Therapy likely to fail.

Diffusion & Dilution - Classic AST Tactics

1. Kirby-Bauer Disk Diffusion Test:

  • Medium: Mueller-Hinton Agar (MHA).
  • Inoculum: Standardized to 0.5 McFarland turbidity. 📌 'King Bauer's MHArena for 0.5 McChampions'.
  • Procedure: Antibiotic-impregnated discs placed on inoculated MHA.
  • Incubation: 35°C for 16-20h (aerobic, ambient air).
  • Result: Measure zone of inhibition diameter (mm); interpret as Susceptible (S), Intermediate (I), or Resistant (R) using CLSI/EUCAST guidelines. Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion test

2. Dilution Methods (Determine Minimum Inhibitory Concentration - MIC):

  • Broth Dilution (Microdilution & Macrodilution):
    • Serial twofold dilutions of antibiotic in broth (e.g., Mueller-Hinton Broth).
    • Inoculated with standardized bacterial suspension.
    • MIC: Lowest antibiotic concentration showing no visible growth after incubation (35°C, 16-20h). Broth microdilution plate showing MIC
  • Agar Dilution:
    • Antibiotic incorporated into agar medium at various concentrations.
    • Reference method, less common in routine labs.

⭐ Mueller-Hinton agar is the recommended medium for routine susceptibility testing of non-fastidious bacteria by the Kirby-Bauer method.

Comparison: Disk Diffusion vs. Broth Dilution

FeatureDisk Diffusion (Kirby-Bauer)Broth Dilution
PrincipleAntibiotic diffusion in agarSerial antibiotic dilution
ResultZone diameter (S/I/R)MIC (µg/mL)
NatureQualitative/Semi-quantitativeQuantitative
Primary UseRoutine screeningPrecise MIC, research

Gradient & Automation - Modern AST Upgrades

  • E-test (Epsilometer test):
    • Uses a strip with a predefined, continuous antibiotic gradient.
    • Placed on an inoculated agar plate, forms an elliptical zone of inhibition.
    • MIC is read directly where the inhibition ellipse edge intersects the strip. E-test showing inhibition zone and MIC
  • Automated Systems (e.g., VITEK, BD Phoenix, MicroScan):
    • Principle: Turbidimetry (measures growth by ↑ turbidity) or colorimetry (detects metabolic activity via color change).
    • Advantages: Rapid results (e.g., 4-18 hrs), standardization, data management, high throughput.
    • Disadvantages: High cost, specific consumables, may miss certain resistance mechanisms (e.g., inducible resistance).

⭐ The E-test is particularly useful for determining MICs of fastidious organisms and for drugs not available in disk format for Kirby-Bauer.

Resistance Spotlight - Unmasking Superbugs

  • Key Resistance Mechanisms & Detection:
ResistanceCommon BugsScreeningConfirmatory Tests
MRSAS. aureusCefoxitin (≤ 21 mm S.a, ≤ 24 mm CoNS)mecA/PBP2a detection
VREEnterococcus spp.Vancomycin screen agar (growth at 6 µg/mL)-
ESBLsE. coli, KlebsiellaIndicator cephalosporins (e.g., CTX, CAZ)Phenotypic: DDS, CDT + Clavulanate 📌 'ESBL needs a CLAVenger hunt'
AmpC β-lactamasesGNBs (Enterobacter, Serratia, Citrobacter)Cefoxitin resistanceInferred. (D-test for inducible clinda-R context-specific, not primary for AmpC)
Carbapenemases (CRE)Klebsiella, E. coli, AcinetobacterErtapenem/Meropenem resistancePhenotypic: mCIM/eCIM, Carba NP. Genotypic (KPC, NDM, OXA-48). MHT (historical).
Double-disk synergy test (ESBL)

mCIM and eCIM Procedure and Results mCIM positive result (Carbapenemase)

⭐ The presence of ESBLs is confirmed by demonstrating synergy between an indicator cephalosporin and clavulanic acid.

  • Carbapenemase Detection Algorithm (Phenotypic):

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Kirby-Bauer disc diffusion measures zones of inhibition to determine susceptibility.
  • MIC (Minimum Inhibitory Concentration) is the lowest antibiotic concentration preventing visible bacterial growth.
  • MBC (Minimum Bactericidal Concentration) is the lowest antibiotic concentration killing 99.9% of bacteria.
  • E-test (epsilometer test) determines MIC using a strip with an antibiotic gradient.
  • CLSI guidelines standardize AST methods and interpretation criteria.
  • Key resistance mechanisms detected include ESBLs, MRSA, and VRE.
  • Automation (e.g., VITEK, MicroScan) provides rapid and standardized AST results for high-throughput labs.

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