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Journal of Clinical Microbiology logoLink to Journal of Clinical Microbiology
. 2007 Jul 25;45(9):2863–2871. doi: 10.1128/JCM.00981-07

Multicenter Evaluation of the BD Phoenix Automated Microbiology System for Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing of Streptococcus Species

Sandra S Richter 1,*, Wanita J Howard 1, Melvin P Weinstein 2, David A Bruckner 3, Janet F Hindler 3, Michael Saubolle 4, Gary V Doern 1
PMCID: PMC2045298  PMID: 17652483

Abstract

This multicenter study evaluated the BD Phoenix Automated Microbiology System STREP panel (BD Diagnostic Systems). Antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) with 13 agents was performed on 2,013 streptococci (938 Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates; 396 group B streptococci [GBS]; 369 viridans group streptococci [VGS]; 290 beta-hemolytic streptococcus groups A, C, and G; and 20 other streptococci) with the Phoenix system and a broth microdilution reference method. Clinical and challenge isolates were tested against cefepime, cefotaxime (CTX), ceftriaxone (CTR), clindamycin (CLI), erythromycin (ERY), gatifloxacin, levofloxacin, linezolid, meropenem, penicillin (PEN), tetracycline (TET), trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and vancomycin. Clinical isolates with major errors or very major errors (VMEs) were retested in duplicate by both methods. The final results for clinical isolates showed the following trends. For all of the organism-antimicrobial agent combinations tested, categorical agreement (CA) was 92 to 100%, with one exception—VGS-PEN (87% CA; all errors were minor). For S. pneumoniae, there was one major error with CLI (0.1%) and one or two VMEs with CTX (4%), CTR (4.5%), ERY (0.9%), and TET (0.7%). For groups A, C, and G, the CA was 97 to 100% and the only VMEs were resolved by additional reference laboratory testing. For GBS, there was only one VME (TET, 0.3%) and D-zone testing of 23 isolates with CLI major errors (one isolate unavailable) revealed inducible CLI resistance. For VGS, the major error rates were 0 to 3% and VMEs occurred with seven agents (3.5 to 7.1%). The mean times required for organism groups to generate results ranged from 8.4 to 9.4 h. The Phoenix system provided reliable and rapid AST results for most of the organism-antimicrobial agent combinations tested.


Since the early 1990s, antimicrobial resistance among Streptococcus pneumoniae and other streptococci has been increasing. Currently, ca. 18% of the pneumococcal isolates in the United States are penicillin resistant (MIC, ≥2 μg/ml) and the overall rate of multidrug resistance (i.e., resistance to at least three classes of antimicrobial agents) is 22% (6). International surveillance of S. pyogenes in 2002 and 2003 found an overall macrolide resistance rate of 11% with higher rates in Spain (23%) and Italy (25%) (1), while U.S. rates approached 7% (12). For S. agalactiae, the reported rates of resistance to erythromycin and clindamycin in the United States during the previous decade were 16 to 20% and 7 to 9%, respectively (10, 11). U.S. surveillance of viridans group streptococcal bloodstream isolates in the 1990s reported that 32 to 56% were not susceptible to penicillin and 38 to 46% were resistant to erythromycin (4, 5).

Because of the emergence of antimicrobial resistance among streptococci, the availability of accurate and convenient antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) methods in clinical microbiology laboratories is essential. This study evaluated a new BD Phoenix Automated Microbiology System STREP AST panel (BD Diagnostic Systems, Sparks, MD) in four clinical microbiology laboratories by comparing its performance to the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) reference broth microdilution method for the susceptibility testing of streptococci.

(This research was presented in part at the 43rd Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 14 September 2003, Chicago, IL [abstr. D215].)

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Isolate characteristics.

Susceptibility testing was performed in parallel on 2,013 streptococcal isolates (938 S. pneumoniae isolates; 396 group B streptococci [S. agalactiae]; 290 beta-hemolytic streptococcus groups A, C, and G; 369 viridans group streptococci [VGS]; and 20 other streptococci) with the BD Phoenix Automated Microbiology System STREP AST panel and the CLSI broth microdilution reference method. The Phoenix system identification of the isolates included in this study is presented in Table 1. A diverse group of 1,878 clinical isolates (35% fresh [stored for ≤7 days, never frozen], 25% recent [stored for 8 to 59 days, never frozen], and 40% stock) were collected and tested at one of the four clinical laboratory sites (University of Iowa Health Care, Iowa City; Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, New Brunswick, NJ; UCLA Healthcare, Los Angeles, CA; or Lab Science of Arizona, Tempe). In addition, 135 challenge isolates from BD representing a wide range of resistance phenotypes were divided among three study sites for testing. All organisms were tested following subculture on Trypticase soy agar with 5% sheep blood and 18 to 24 h of incubation at 35°C in an atmosphere of 5 to 7% CO2.

TABLE 1.

Phoenix identification of the 2,013 streptococci evaluated in this study

Organism(s) No. of isolates No. of isolates of the following type:
Challenge Clinical
Fresh Recent Stock
Streptococcus pneumoniae 938 102 171 149 516
S. agalactiae 396 2 189 153 52
Beta-hemolytic streptococcus groups A, C, and G 290 20 153 88 29
    S. pyogenes 240 11 134 78 17
    S. dysgalactiae 12 3 5 4 0
    S. dysgalactiae/canis 38 6 14 6 12
Viridans group streptococci 369 11 152 67 139
    S. anginosus 28 2 6 10 10
    S. constellatus 12 0 2 5 5
    S. cristatus 4 0 1 0 3
    S. equinus 1 0 1 0 0
    S. gordonii 15 1 1 2 11
    S. intermedius 12 0 2 4 6
    S. mitis 85 0 58 6 21
    S. mitis group 46 2 30 6 8
    S. mitis/pneumoniae 21 1 5 4 11
    S. mutans 3 1 0 1 1
    S. oralis 83 1 26 17 39
    S. parasanguinis 36 1 15 8 12
    S. salivarius 11 1 4 2 4
    S. sanguinis 7 0 1 2 4
    S. sobrinus 1 1 0 0 0
    S. vestibularis 4 0 0 0 4
Other streptococci 20 0 4 8 8
    S. acidominimus 7 0 3 1 3
    S. bovis 13 0 1 7 5
All isolates 2,013 135 669 465 744

Phoenix susceptibility testing.

The Phoenix instrument measures colorimetric change and turbidity to determine growth. Organism growth causes the Phoenix AST-S indicator to change from blue (oxidized) to pink (reduced form). Each isolate was tested on three prototype Phoenix panels (one ID-AST combination and two AST-only panels). One drop of Phoenix AST-S indicator was added to Phoenix AST-S broth tubes and used within 2 h (if stored on a bench top) or 8 h (if stored in a dark place). Well-isolated growth from a subculture plate was suspended in a Phoenix ID broth tube and adjusted to the turbidity equivalent of a 0.5 McFarland standard with a CrystalSpec nephelometer. Within 60 min, a sterile pipette was used to transfer 25-μl aliquots of the ID broth to five Phoenix AST-S broth tubes (inoculum density of ∼5 × 105 CFU/ml per tube) and onto Trypticase soy agar with 5% sheep blood as a purity check. A 1.5-ml aliquot of the ID broth was transferred to 12.5 ml of sterile diluent for inoculation of reference broth microdilution trays. Within 30 min, each side of the two Phoenix AST panels and the right side of the combination panels were inoculated with a tube of AST-S broth. The left side of the combination panel was inoculated with the remaining Phoenix ID broth. Panels were placed in the Phoenix instrument within 30 min of inoculation.

Reference method.

The CLSI broth microdilution method (2) was performed with frozen microdilution trays containing cation-adjusted Mueller-Hinton broth with 2 to 5% lysed horse blood prepared by PASCO Laboratories (Wheat Ridge, CO). The reference panels were thawed at room temperature and used within 2 h. Within 15 min of standardization of the Phoenix ID broth, 1.5 ml was transferred to 12.5 ml of sterile diluent. After mixing, the diluted suspension was poured into a seed tray and a new disposable multipronged device was used to inoculate each panel. The final concentration of bacteria in the microdilution tray was ca. 5 × 105 CFU/ml. A purity check was performed with the remaining seed tray inoculum. The panels were incubated in ambient air for 20 to 24 h at 35°C prior to the visual reading of endpoints.

Quality control.

Four quality control (QC) strains were tested daily with the reference method and the Phoenix system. These strains were S. pneumoniae ATCC 49619, S. pneumoniae BD 3951, S. pneumoniae BD 4218, and S. mitis BD 3992.

Antimicrobials tested.

The antimicrobial agents (and dilutions) tested in the Phoenix panels were cefepime (0.03 to 4 μg/ml), cefotaxime (0.015 to 4 μg/ml), ceftriaxone (0.015 to 4 μg/ml), clindamycin (0.015 to 4 μg/ml), erythromycin (0.015 to 16 μg/ml), gatifloxacin (0.06 to 8 μg/ml), levofloxacin (0.25 to 16 μg/ml), linezolid (0.25 to 16 μg/ml), meropenem (0.03 to 2 μg/ml), penicillin (0.015 to 32 μg/ml), tetracycline (0.06 to 16 μg/ml), trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX; 0.06 to 16 μg/ml), and vancomycin (0.06 to 32 μg/ml). The broth microdilution reference panels included the same antimicrobial dilutions, with the exception that the linezolid range extended to 32 μg/ml. The clindamycin wells of the Phoenix panels included a low level of inducer (erythromycin).

Evaluation of results.

CLSI interpretive criteria were used to interpret each MIC as susceptible (S), intermediate (I), or resistant (R) (nonmeningitis breakpoints were used for pneumococci) (3). For each antimicrobial agent tested, the Phoenix system MIC and Phoenix interpretative category of susceptible (S), intermediate (I), or resistant (R) was compared to the broth microdilution results to determine rates of essential agreement (EA; MIC within 1 log2 dilution), categorical agreement (CA; interpretative category of S, I, or R agreement), very major (VM) errors (false susceptible with rates determined by using the number of resistant organisms as the denominator), major errors (false resistance with rates determined by using the number of susceptible isolates as the denominator), and minor errors (I by the reference method and S or R by the Phoenix system or I by the Phoenix system and S or R by the reference method). The Phoenix MICs used for comparison were taken directly from the instrument without expert system (BDExpert) interpretation.

For discrepancy resolution of clinical isolates with major or VM errors, the organism-drug combination was retested in duplicate by both methods. All three results (initial and two repeat results) were used to determine the majority result. The majority result became the final result. Results were excluded from analysis when Phoenix or reference test results were not available, when duplicate isolates of the same species had been tested from the same patient and the same body site, when isolate purity was questioned, when there was no growth in either the Phoenix or reference panel, and when QC results were out of control.

Macrolide resistance phenotype.

The double-disk diffusion test was performed on erythromycin-resistant and clindamycin-susceptible S. agalactiae clinical isolates (D-zone test) with 15-μg erythromycin and 2-μg clindamycin disks placed 12 mm apart (3). Isolates with blunting of the inhibition zone around the clindamycin disk adjacent to the erythromycin disk (D-zone positive) were considered to have inducible clindamycin resistance.

RESULTS

For S. pneumoniae, the EA of the Phoenix system with the reference method was >96% for all of the agents tested except the TMP-SMX challenge isolate results (93.4% EA) (Table 2). CAs of <90% occurred among challenge isolates primarily because of minor error rates of 14.7% for meropenem, 15.8% for ceftriaxone, and 21.7% for cefepime and levofloxacin. Discrepancy testing of clinical isolates resolved 8 of 13 VM errors and 12 of 13 major errors. The final CA for clinical isolates was 91.8 to 100%, with a single major error for clindamycin (0.1%), only two VM errors for erythromycin (0.9%), and one VM error for cefotaxime (4%), ceftriaxone (4.5%), and tetracycline (0.7%). The Phoenix MICs of clindamycin, erythromycin, gatifloxacin, levofloxacin, linezolid, TMP-SMX, and vancomycin for clinical isolates were often 1 dilution lower than those obtained by the reference method. Most of the discordant Phoenix penicillin MICs were 1 dilution higher than those obtained by the reference method.

TABLE 2.

Comparison of Phoenix to reference method MICs and interpretive category errors for S. pneumoniae

Isolates and antimicrobial agent(s) No. of isolates Initial/resolved
% CA No. of resistant isolatesa No. (%) of VM errorsb No. of susceptible isolatesa No. (%) of major errorsc No. (%) of minor errorsd % EAe No. of Phoenix MICs within specified log2 no. of dilutions of reference method MIC
>−2 −2 −1 Same +1 +2 >+2
Clinical
    Cefepime 813 92.4 17 0 (0) 708 1 (0.1)/0 (0) 61 (7.5)/62 (7.6) 98.8/99 0 6 50 669/670 84/85 3/1 1
    Cefotaxime 815 96.4 25 1 (4.0) 758 0 (0) 28 (3.4) 99 0 7 64 712 31 1 0
    Ceftriaxone 815 97.8 22 1 (4.5) 777 0 (0) 17 (2.1) 99.4 0 5 46 706 58 0 0
    Clindamycin 828 99.5 82 0 (0) 745 2 (0.3)/1 (0.1) 2 (0.2)/3 (0.4) 96.4 1 23 252 489 57 4 2
    Erythromycin 820 98.7/99.4 235/234 4 (1.7)/2 (0.9) 582/583 4 (0.7)/0 (0) 3 (0.4) 96.3/97.1 6/4 14 349/355 398 43 6 4/0
    Gatifloxacin 820 99.3/99.8 3/2 1 (33.3)/0 (0) 815/816 1 (0.1)/0 (0) 4 (0.5)/2 (2.4) 98.4/98.8 2 7 199/200 485/487 123 3/1 1/0
    Levofloxacin 821 99.4/99.6 2 0 (0) 817 2 (0.2)/0 (0) 3 (0.4) 99.4/99.8 0 3/2 240/242 552/553 24 0 2/0
    Linezolid 821 99.6/100 2/0 2 (100)/0 (0) 819/821 1 (0.1)/0 (0) 98.5/98.8 1/0 10/9 313/315 456 40 1 0
    Meropenem 817 91.6/91.8 95/94 0 (0) 622/621 1 (0.2)/0 (0) 68 (8.3)/67 (8.2) 99.0/99.3 2 3 47 684/685 78/79 1/0 2/1
    Penicillin 823 93.8 189 0 (0) 508 0 (0) 51 (6.2) 97.7 4 4 96 470 238 11 0
    Tetracycline 809 97.9/98.0 151/150 2 (1.3)/1 (0.7) 648 1 (0.2)/0 (0) 14 (1.7)/15 (1.9) 96.5/96.7 13/12 2 81 617/618 83 11 2
    TMP-SMX 815 95.6/95.7 243/242 1 (0.4)/0 (0) 493/494 0 (0) 35 (4.3) 96.1/96.2 3/2 27 283 444 56/57 1 1
    Vancomycin 822 99.9/100 1/0 1 (100)/0 (0) 821/822 0 (0) 98.2/98.3 1/0 13 307/308 491 9 1 0
Challenge
    Cefepime 92 78.3 7 0 (0) 62 0 (0) 20 (21.7) 100 0 0 6 56 30 0 0
    Cefotaxime 92 92.4 14 0 (0) 60 0 (0) 7 (7.6) 97.8 0 2 6 76 8 0 0
    Ceftriaxone 95 84.2 13 0 (0) 66 0 (0) 15 (15.8) 98.9 0 1 14 68 12 0 0
    Clindamycin 91 98.9 28 0 (0) 63 1 (1.6) 0 (0) 98.9 0 0 14 69 7 0 1
    Erythromycin 89 98.9 56 1 (1.8) 33 0 (0) 0 (0) 98.9 1 0 16 64 8 0 0
    Gatifloxacin 87 100 7 0 (0) 80 0 (0) 0 (0) 97.7 0 2 16 59 10 0 0
    Levofloxacin 100 78.3 7 0 (0) 62 0 (0) 20 (21.7) 99 0 1 28 67 4 0 0
    Linezolid 88 100 0 0 (0) 88 0 (0) 98.9 0 0 14 60 13 1 0
    Meropenem 95 85.3 30 0 (0) 49 0 (0) 14 (14.7) 98.9 0 0 3 67 24 1 0
    Penicillin 93 95.7 50 0 (0) 23 0 (0) 4 (4.3) 97.8 0 2 5 48 38 0 0
    Tetracycline 94 98.9 47 1 (2.1) 47 0 (0) 0 (0) 97.9 1 0 11 74 7 1 0
    TMP-SMX 91 92.3 60 1 (1.7) 19 0 (0) 6 (6.6) 93.4 1 5 12 66 7 0 0
    Vancomycin 92 100 0 0 (0) 92 0 (0) 98.9 0 1 9 81 1 0 0
a

Based on reference method result.

b

VM error, resistant by the reference method but susceptible by Phoenix; percent based on the number of resistant isolates.

c

Major error, susceptible by the reference method but resistant by Phoenix; percent based on the number of susceptible isolates.

d

Minor error, intermediate by the reference method but resistant or susceptible by Phoenix or intermediate by Phoenix but susceptible or resistant by the reference method.

e

EA, Phoenix MIC ±1 log2 dilution of reference method MIC.

The final Phoenix results for beta-hemolytic streptococcus groups A, C, and G compared favorably to those obtained by the reference method, with CAs of 97 to 100% for clinical isolates (Table 3). Discrepancy testing of clinical isolates resolved 13 of 15 VM errors and 6 of 12 major errors. The remaining major errors were for clindamycin (2.3%) and tetracycline (0.5%). The VM errors remaining after discrepancy analysis were attributed to two S. pyogenes clinical isolates that were linezolid resistant by the reference method only. However, additional testing of the banked isolates at a reference laboratory indicated that the isolates were linezolid susceptible. The only clinical isolate EA of <90% was obtained with gatifloxacin (85% EA), with most Phoenix MICs falling 1 or 2 dilutions higher than the reference broth microdilution MICs, yet the CA was 98.9% (only three minor errors). The Phoenix MICs of clindamycin and levofloxacin were also often 1 dilution higher than those obtained by the reference method. The EA was <90% for challenge isolate results with clindamycin (88.2%), erythromycin (82.4%), gatifloxacin (89.5%), and tetracycline (85%), but this caused only two minor errors.

TABLE 3.

Comparison of Phoenix to reference method MICs and interpretive category errors for beta-hemolytic streptococcus groups A, C, and G

Isolates and antimicrobial agent No. of isolates Initial/resolved
% CA No. of resistant isolatesa No. (%) of VM errorsb No. of susceptible isolatesa No. (%) of major errorsc No. (%) of minor errorsd % EAe No. of Phoenix MICs within specified log2 no. of dilutions of reference method MIC
>−2 −2 −1 Same +1 +2 >+2
Clinical
    Cefepime 266 100 0 0 (0) 266 0 (0) 0 (0) 98.9/99.6 0 3/1 2/3 261/262 0 0 0
    Cefotaxime 267 100 0 0 (0) 267 0 (0) 0 (0) 99.3/100 1/0 1/0 0/1 265/266 0 0 0
    Ceftriaxone 266 99.6/100 1/0 1 (100)/0 (0) 265/266 0 (0) 0 (0) 99.2/100 1/0 1/0 2/3 262/263 0 0 0
    Clindamycin 268 96.6/97.0 3 0 (0) 264 7 (2.7)/6 (2.3) 2 (0.7) 93.3/93.7 0 2 24 87/88 139 8 8/7
    Erythromycin 266 97.7/99.2 25 0 (0) 241 4 (1.7)/0 (0) 2 (0.8) 92.9/94.4 0 0 30 145/147 72/74 15/14 4/1
    Gatifloxacin 268 98.9 0 0 (0) 268 0 (0) 3 (1.1) 85.1/85.4 0 1 4 33 191/192 33/32 6
    Levofloxacin 268 99.3/99.6 0 0 (0) 267/268 0 (0) 2 (0.7)/1 (0.4) 95.9/96.3 0 2/1 13 108 136/137 8 1
    Linezolid 268 96.3/99.3 10/2 10 (100)/2 (100) 258/266 0 (0) 95.9/98.5 1 9/2 145/152 103 9 0 1
    Meropenem 267 100 0 0 (0) 267 0 (0) 0 (0) 99.6/100 0 1/0 1 264/265 1 0 0
    Penicillin 267 98.9/100 3/0 3 (100)/0 (0) 264/267 0 (0) 0 (0) 97.8/98.5 3/1 3 8 251/253 2 0 0
    Tetracycline 247 98.0/98.4 31/30 1 (3.2)/0 (0) 212/213 1 (0.5) 3 (1.2) 91.5/91.9 1/0 1 24 140/141 62 14 5
    Vancomycin 267 100 0 0 (0) 267 0 (0) 99.6 0 1 69 190 7 0 0
Challenge
    Cefepime 20 100 0 0 (0) 20 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 20 0 0 0
    Cefotaxime 20 100 0 0 (0) 20 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 20 0 0 0
    Ceftriaxone 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 19 0 0 0
    Clindamycin 17 94.1 3 0 (0) 14 0 (0) 1 (5.9) 88.2 0 0 1 5 9 1 1
    Erythromycin 17 94.1 12 0 (0) 5 0 (0) 1 (5.9) 82.4 0 0 0 11 3 2 1
    Gatifloxacin 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 0 (0) 89.5 0 0 0 0 17 2 0
    Levofloxacin 20 100 0 0 (0) 20 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 9 11 0 0
    Linezolid 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 100 0 0 5 14 0 0 0
    Meropenem 20 100 0 0 (0) 20 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 20 0 0 0
    Penicillin 20 100 0 0 (0) 20 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 20 0 0 0
    Tetracycline 20 100 6 0 (0) 14 0 (0) 0 (0) 85 0 2 0 10 7 1 0
    Vancomycin 20 100 0 0 (0) 20 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 18 2 0 0
a

Based on reference method result.

b

VM error, resistant by the reference method but susceptible by Phoenix; percent based on the number of resistant isolates.

c

Major error, susceptible by the reference method but resistant by Phoenix; percent based on the number of susceptible isolates.

d

Minor error, intermediate by the reference method but resistant or susceptible by Phoenix or intermediate by Phoenix but susceptible or resistant by the reference method.

e

EA, Phoenix MIC ±1 log2 dilution of reference method MIC.

The Phoenix results were accurate for the S. agalactiae clinical isolates, except for the overcalling of clindamycin resistance (24 major errors, 7.3%) (Table 4). The CLSI D-zone test (5) was performed on the 50 available isolates that were erythromycin resistant and clindamycin susceptible by the reference method (one isolate that also represented a major error was unavailable for D-zone testing). The 23 available S. agalactiae isolates representing the major errors were all positive for inducible clindamycin resistance. Two erythromycin-resistant S. agalactiae isolates with minor errors for clindamycin (Phoenix method, I; reference method, S) were also D-zone positive. Only 1 of the 25 S. agalactiae isolates that were erythromycin resistant and clindamycin susceptible by both the Phoenix and reference methods was positive for inducible clindamycin resistance by D-zone testing.

TABLE 4.

Comparison of Phoenix to reference method MICs and interpretive category errors for S. agalactiae and other streptococci

Isolates and antimicrobial agent No. of isolates Initial/resolved
% CA No. of resistant isolatesa No. (%) of VM errorsb No. of susceptible isolatesa No. (%) of major errorsc No. (%) of minor errorsd % EAe No. of Phoenix MICs within specified log2 no. of dilutions of reference method MIC
>−2 −2 −1 Same +1 +2 >+2
S. agalactiae
    Cefepime 373 99.2/100 0 0 (0) 373 3 (0.8)/0 (0) 0 (0) 98.4/98.9 0 3 145/147 202 20 0 3/1
    Cefotaxime 374 99.7/100 0 0 (0) 374 1 (0.3)/0 (0) 0 (0) 99.2/99.7 0 1/0 1 369/371 1 1 1/0
    Ceftriaxone 375 100 0 0 (0) 375 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 370 5 0 0
    Clindamycin 382 91.4/91.9 51/53 0 (0) 331/329 24 (7.3)/21 (6.4) 9 (2.4)/10 (2.6) 89.0/89.5 2 0 15 232/234 93 13 27/25
    Erythromycin 380 96.8/98.2 98/99 0 (0) 281/280 8 (2.8)/3 (1.1) 4 (1.1) 90.3/91.8 2 9 90 211/215 51/52 7 10/5
    Gatifloxacin 381 99.7 1 0 (0) 380 0 (0) 1 (0.3) 97.9 0 6/7 70 248 55 2/1 0
    Levofloxacin 381 99.7 1 0 (0) 380 0 (0) 1 (0.3) 96.1 0 14 177 180 9 0 1
    Linezolid 380 96.8/99.5 5/0 5 (100)/0 (0) 375/380 7 (1.9)/2 (0.5) 92.4/94.5 1/0 22/19 229/234 116/117 6/8 4/1 2/1
    Meropenem 376 100 0 0 (0) 376 0 (0) 0 (0) 98.4/98.7 0 2 152/153 168 50 2 2/1
    Penicillin 377 100 0 0 (0) 377 0 (0) 0 (0) 88.3 2 41 179 122 32 1 0
    Tetracycline 377 97.3/98.9 333/339 1 (0.3) 43/37 6 (14.0)/0 (0) 3 (0.8) 95.5/97.1 1 0 1 341/347 18 9 7/1
    Vancomycin 378 99.5/100 0 0 (0) 378 2 (0.5)/0 (0) 98.9/99.5 0 2 101/102 268/269 5 0 2/0
Other streptococcif
    Cefepime 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 1 15 3 0 0
    Cefotaxime 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 2 15 2 0 0
    Ceftriaxone 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 0 14 5 0 0
    Clindamycin 18 88.9 0 0 (0) 18 1 (5.6) 1 (5.6) 77.8 0 0 1 8 5 3 1
    Erythromycin 19 100 6 0 (0) 13 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 2 15 2 0 0
    Gatifloxacin 19 94.7 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 1 (5.3) 78.9 1 0 3 4 8 2 1
    Levofloxacin 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 0 (0) 84.2 0 1 2 12 2 0 2
    Linezolid 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 100 0 0 11 8 0 0 0
    Meropenem 19 94.7 1 1 (100) 18 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 2 17 0 0 0
    Penicillin 19 100 1 0 (0) 17 0 (0) 0 (0) 94.7 0 0 2 7 9 1 0
    Tetracycline 19 94.7/100 10/11 0 (0) 9/8 0 (0) 0 (0) 73.7/78.9 1 0 1 11/12 2 3 1/0
    Vancomycin 19 100 0 0 (0) 19 0 (0) 100 0 0 2 14 3 0 0
a

Based on reference method result.

b

VM error, resistant by the reference method but susceptible by Phoenix; percent based on the number of resistant isolates.

c

Major error, susceptible by the reference method but resistant by Phoenix; percent based on the number of susceptible isolates.

d

Minor error, intermediate by the reference method but resistant or susceptible by Phoenix or intermediate by Phoenix but susceptible or resistant by the reference method.

e

EA, Phoenix MIC ±1 log2 dilution of reference method MIC.

f

Other streptococci: S. acidominimus and S. bovis.

There was also a tendency for S. agalactiae penicillin MICs reported by the Phoenix system to be 1 or 2 dilutions lower than those obtained by the reference method (88.3% EA) (Table 4). For the two S. agalactiae isolates included in the challenge set, the Phoenix system showed 100% CA and EA with the reference method (susceptible to all agents; data not shown).

For the VGS clinical isolates (Table 5), the CA was below 90% for only one antimicrobial agent (penicillin, 13.1% minor errors). Discrepancy testing of VGS clinical isolates resolved 9 of the 27 VM errors, but the final VM error rate for 7 agents exceeded 1.5%. The major error rate for VGS was 0 to 3% after discrepancy testing resolved 6 of the 21 major errors. Among the 19 clinical isolates identified as S. bovis and S. acidominimus (other streptococci, Table 4), there was a single VM error (100%, meropenem) and one major error (5.6%, clindamycin).

TABLE 5.

Comparison of Phoenix to reference method MICs and interpretive category errors for viridans group streptococci

Isolates and antimicrobial agent No. of isolates Initial/resolved
% CA No. of resistant isolatesa No. (%) of VM errorsb No. of susceptible isolatesa No. (%) of major errorsc No. (%) of minor errorsd % EAe No. of Phoenix MICs within specified log2 no. of dilutions of reference method MIC
>−2 −2 −1 Same +1 +2 >+2
Clinical
    Cefepime 329 92.7 14 1 (7.1) 294 0 (0) 23 (7.0) 90.9/91.2 1 16/15 82/83 192 25 9 4
    Cefotaxime 329 96.7 17 1 (5.9) 304 0 (0) 10 (3.0) 91.5 2 18 73 207 21 6 2
    Ceftriaxone 330 96.7 15 0 (0) 307 0 (0) 11 (3.3) 92.4 1 11 62 214 29 9 4
    Clindamycin 327 99.1 22 1 (4.5) 302 0 (0) 2 (0.6) 96.3 1 2 55 214 46 7 2
    Erythromycin 333 94/95.5 199/198 10 (5.0)/7 (3.5) 133/134 7 (5.3)/4 (3.0) 3 (0.9)/4 (1.2) 84.7/85.9 13/12 20/19 86/89 171 25/26 9 9/7
    Gatifloxacin 333 98.2/98.5 15 0 (0) 315/317 2 (0.6) 4 (1.2) 91.6/92.2 2 7/6 71 163/165 71 14/13 5
    Levofloxacin 334 98.5 17 1 (5.9) 316 2 (0.6) 2 (0.6)/3 (0.9) 96.4/96.7 1/0 4 98 189/190 35 4 3
    Linezolid 328 99.4 0 0 (0) 328 2 (0.6) 97.9/98.2 0 3/2 124/125 169 28 2 2
    Meropenem 330 98.2/98.8 38/37 4 (10.5)/2 (5.4) 292/293 2 (0.7) 0 (0) 89.1/89.4 5/4 18 77/78 180 37 11 2
    Penicillin 329 86.9 30 0 (0) 188 0 (0) 43 (13.1) 86.9 10 14 54 165 68 10 8
    Tetracycline 323 90.4/92.0 102/101 9 (8.8)/5 (5.0) 207 6 (2.9)/3 (1.4) 16 (5.0)/18 (5.6) 83.3/85.1 15/11 12/11 55/56 172/176 42/43 13 14/13
    Vancomycin 329 100 0 0 (0) 329 0 (0) 96.0 1 8 155 147 14 1 3
Challenge
    Cefepime 11 90.9 0 0 (0) 11 0 (0) 1 (9.1) 100 0 0 2 7 2 0 0
    Cefotaxime 10 90 0 0 (0) 10 0 (0) 1 (10.0) 100 0 0 0 7 3 0 0
    Ceftriaxone 11 90.9 0 0 (0) 11 0 (0) 1 (9.1) 100 0 0 0 8 3 0 0
    Clindamycin 9 100 0 0 (0) 9 0 (0) 0 (0) 88.9 0 0 0 7 1 1 0
    Erythromycin 8 87.5 3 1 (33.3) 5 0 (0) 0 (0) 75 0 1 0 4 2 1 0
    Gatifloxacin 10 100 1 0 (0) 9 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 1 5 4 0 0
    Levofloxacin 11 100 1 0 (0) 10 0 (0) 0 (0) 100 0 0 3 7 1 0 0
    Linezolid 9 100 0 0 (0) 9 0 (0) 100 0 0 3 5 1 0 0
    Meropenem 9 100 0 0 (0) 9 0 (0) 0 (0) 88.9 0 0 1 6 1 1 0
    Penicillin 11 90.9 1 0 (0) 8 0 (0) 1 (9.1) 90.9 0 0 1 4 5 1 0
    Tetracycline 10 80 1 0 (0) 8 0 (0) 2 (20.0) 80 1 0 2 3 3 0 1
    Vancomycin 10 100 0 0 (0) 10 0 (0) 100 0 0 3 6 1 0 0
a

Based on reference method result.

b

VM error, resistant by the reference method but susceptible by Phoenix; percent based on the number of resistant isolates.

c

Major error, susceptible by the reference method but resistant by Phoenix; percent based on the number of susceptible isolates.

d

Minor error, intermediate by the reference method but resistant or susceptible by Phoenix or intermediate by Phoenix but susceptible or resistant by the reference method.

e

EA, Phoenix MIC ±1 log2 dilution of reference method MIC.

The mean time necessary to generate all of the AST results was 9.0 h. The mean times necessary to generate results for the organism groups were as follows: S. pneumoniae, 9.0 h; beta-hemolytic streptococcus groups A, C, and G, 8.4 h; S. agalactiae, 8.7 h; viridans group streptococci, 9.4 h; other streptococci, 9.0 h (Table 6).

TABLE 6.

Times required to obtain results for 2,013 streptococcal clinical and challenge isolates

Antimicrobial agent(s) Mean time (h) required to obtain results
S. pneumoniae (n = 938) Beta-hemolytic streptococcus groups A, C, and G (n = 290) S. agalactiae (n = 396) Viridans group streptococci (n = 369) Other streptococci (n = 20)
Cefepime 9.4 8.7 9.1 9.6 9.2
Cefotaxime 9.1 8.7 9.0 9.3 9.2
Ceftriaxone 9.2 8.7 9.0 9.4 9.2
Clindamycin 10.8 10.6 10.6 10.6 12.1
Erythromycin 9.9 10.2 10.4 12.0 10.6
Gatifloxacin 9.4 7.9 8.6 9.7 9.1
Levofloxacin 9.4 7.9 8.5 9.6 8.9
Linezolid 7.8 7.5 8.0 8.1 7.9
Meropenem 9.0 7.5 7.9 8.9 8.1
Penicillin 8.5 7.6 7.9 8.7 8.1
Tetracycline 8.8 8.8 7.1 9.7 8.5
TMP-SMX 7.9
Vancomycin 7.7 7.5 8.0 8.3 8.1
All 9.0 8.4 8.7 9.4 9.0

The most common reason for exclusion from analysis was the availability of a Phoenix or reference result. Eight isolate exclusions were duplicates of the same species from the same patient and the same body site. The overall growth failure rate was 1.1%—well below the FDA requirement of <10% (7). The growth failure rates for each antimicrobial agent ranged from 0.8% to 1.2%. The number of result exclusions due to growth failure varied among organism-agent combinations. For example, 7 of 29 viridans group streptococcus-penicillin result exclusions, 8 of 21 S. pneumoniae-ceftriaxone exclusions, 11 of 14 S. agalactiae-erythromycin exclusions, and all 4 beta-hemolytic streptococcus group A, C, and G-erythromycin exclusions were due to growth failure. Exclusions due to a mixed-purity plate or QC results out of range were infrequent.

DISCUSSION

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration requires AST systems to generate results that are comparable to those of the CLSI reference method for each antimicrobial agent reported (≥90% CA, ≥90% EA, ≤1.5% VM errors, ≤3% major errors) (7). In this multicenter study, the Phoenix system generated accurate susceptibility test results for most of the streptococcal species tested. The advantages of using the Phoenix instrument rather than a manual method for testing streptococci in a clinical laboratory are the generation of results in a shorter time period and labor savings associated with automated reading and interpretation of MICs. The BDExpert system analyzes susceptibility profiles for unusual results, and potentially erroneous results are flagged for verification. Reporting of results is predicated on CLSI guidelines (3). BDExpert interpretation was not evaluated in this study.

Of the Streptococcus species included in this study, pneumococci are the most frequently tested in clinical microbiology laboratories because of the significant rate of resistance to multiple antimicrobial agents now recognized with this pathogen. The provision of accurate susceptibility results in a timely manner can minimize the time patients receive inappropriate therapy and limit the use of needlessly broad-spectrum agents. The Phoenix is the second automated AST instrument to offer a panel for S. pneumoniae testing that may be reported after a relatively short incubation period (<16 h).

The Phoenix results for the clinical isolates of S. pneumoniae compared favorably to those obtained by the reference method, with few exceptions (Table 2). Although the VM error rates of clinical isolates for cefotaxime (4%) and ceftriaxone (4.5%) exceeded 1.5%, these rates represented a failure to detect one resistant isolate; further, the instrument accurately detected resistance for isolates included in the challenge set that were cefotaxime (n = 14) or ceftriaxone (n = 13) resistant. The VM error rates which exceeded 1.5% for challenge isolates (erythromycin, tetracycline, TMP-SMX) were also each due to one isolate. The clinical isolate collection included three- to fourfold more isolates resistant to erythromycin, tetracycline, and TMP-SMX than the challenge set, yet they were detected without difficulty (0 to 0.9% VM error rates). Overcalling of resistance was a rare event, but minor error rates exceeded 10% for challenge isolates with four agents (cefepime, ceftriaxone, levofloxacin, and meropenem). However, the high EAs (98.9 to 100%) for those four drugs suggest that the errors were a consequence of MICs for isolates falling close to the interpretative breakpoints.

An evaluation of the VITEK 2 card for susceptibility testing of S. pneumoniae isolates reported major and VM error rates that are similar to the Phoenix error rates in the present study for the six common antimicrobial agents cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, erythromycin, penicillin, tetracycline, TMP-SMX, and vancomycin (8). Minor error rates in the VITEK 2 study obtained with TMP-SMX (16.9 to 19.1%), cefotaxime (11.9 to 19.8%), and penicillin (9.5 to 16.7%) for clinical and challenge pneumococcal strains (8) were higher than those found in this Phoenix evaluation. A more rigorous evaluation of VITEK 2 for detecting fluoroquinolone resistance (challenge set of 196 pneumococci with 66 gatifloxacin resistant or intermediate) reported 13.3% minor errors and one (1.7%) VM error for gatifloxacin (9). There are obvious limitations associated with the comparison of results from studies that tested different isolates; however, head-to-head evaluations of the VITEK 2 and Phoenix instruments with common collections of streptococci have not been described in the literature.

Although S. pyogenes and S. agalactiae are important pathogens, these species are predictably susceptible to penicillin, the therapeutic agent of choice. The M100-S17 CLSI document states that there is no clinical need to perform susceptibility testing of penicillins and other β-lactams with these organisms (3). However, testing of the susceptibility of these organisms to clindamycin and erythromycin is recommended when the patient is allergic to β-lactam agents (13). The Phoenix system performed well when determining the susceptibility of beta-hemolytic streptococci to erythromycin, with no VM errors, 0 to 1.1% major errors, and 0.7 to 5.9% minor errors. The Phoenix system had no VM errors and acceptable minor error rates (0.7 to 5.9%) when testing clindamycin against beta-hemolytic streptococci.

The detection of inducible clindamycin resistance among beta-hemolytic streptococci by the CLSI reference method requires the performance of the manual D-zone test on erythromycin-resistant, clindamycin-susceptible isolates (3). An evaluation of the VITEK 1 and VITEK 2 systems for the detection of erythromycin and clindamycin resistance among 304 S. agalactiae isolates also concluded that the double-disk diffusion method was needed to ensure accurate results (14). In this study, 23 of the 24 S. agalactiae clinical isolates with major errors for clindamycin were available for additional testing, and all had positive D-zone test results (inducible clindamycin resistance). Of the 25 S. agalactiae isolates that were erythromycin resistant and clindamycin susceptible by both the Phoenix system and the reference method, only 1 was D-zone test positive. Although further evaluation is necessary with more strains, it appears that the Phoenix system's use of an inducer (a small amount of erythromycin in clindamycin wells) reliably defines isolates of S. agalactiae with inducible clindamycin resistance as being clindamycin resistant or intermediate, potentially eliminating the need for D-zone testing of erythromycin-resistant and clindamycin-susceptible S. agalactiae isolates.

The need to critically evaluate all susceptibility results (not only those generated by an automated instrument) was demonstrated by the VM errors remaining after discrepancy testing for two S. pyogenes isolates reported as resistant to linezolid by the reference method only. Since linezolid resistance has not been previously reported in this species, the isolates were sent to a reference laboratory, where testing by the CLSI broth microdilution method in duplicate and Etest revealed linezolid susceptibility.

The lowest rates of concordance of the Phoenix results with the reference method occurred for the VGS isolates (Table 5). Additional studies with more VGS strains are needed to further assess the performance of the Phoenix system for antimicrobial agents with VM error rates above 1.5% or minor error rates exceeding 10%.

Our findings suggest that clinical microbiology laboratories may rely on the Phoenix system for accurate susceptibility testing of S. pneumoniae and beta-hemolytic streptococci. The shorter incubation time required by the Phoenix system in comparison to reference methods has the potential to enhance patient care.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to the following technologists for participation in this study: Linda Akers, Barry Buschelman, Janet Croco, Dennis Troy, Cassie Dohrn, Fathollah Riahi, Judy Rothberg, Nipa Patel, Teshina Wilson, Cinthia Flores, Frazanenh Sooudipour, Donna Mobley, Bryce Yoder, and Diana Duterte.

Financial support for this study came from BD Diagnostic Systems (Sparks, MD).

S.S.R. has received research funding from Becton Dickinson, Abbott Laboratories, and Pfizer. G.V.D. has received research support during the past 12 months from Abbott Laboratories, Bayer Pharmaceutical Co., Astra-Zeneca, Sanofi-Aventis, and Merck & Co. D.A.B. has received research support from Dade Behring. M.P.W. received research support from Becton Dickinson, Dade Behring, and Bayer during the study period. The rest of us had no conflict of interest.

Footnotes

Published ahead of print on 25 July 2007.

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