CHESTGuidelines & Topic CollectionsSepsisRapid Diagnostics for Infectious Diseases in the ICU

Rapid Diagnostics for Infectious Diseases in the ICU

Compiled by the CHEST Sepsis Resources Steering Committee

Last updated May 26, 2023

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Multiplex PCR Panels

  • Commercially available assays used to diagnose CNS, lower and upper respiratory infections
  • Provide semiquantitative detection of multiple viral and bacterial pathogens
  • Detect some common genetic markers for antibiotic resistance (eg, beta-lactams)
  • 60%-75% detection rates vs 44% for standard culture

Rapid Blood Culture Identification Systems

  • Faster results than conventional blood cultures, which need 48-72 hours
  • Used to detect key genes from positive blood cultures
  • Unlike PCR, lacks an amplification step, so a threshold quantity of bacteria is needed
  • Detects some common beta-lactam resistance genes

MALDI-TOF

  • Uses mass spectrometry to provide rapid species identification of positive cultures
  • Results 24-28 hours faster than traditional biochemical methods
  • Currently cannot provide antibiotic susceptibility results
  • Some “species” cannot be differentiated (eg, E coli and Shigella)

Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS)

  • Measurement of circulating pathogen cell-free DNA from human plasma
  • Potentially yields very rapid results
  • Not pathogen-specific, unlike PCR
  • Observational study in Germany found 72% of patients with septic shock had positive NGS results vs 33% with positive cultures ➔ 53% of findings could lead to changes in therapy! (Grumaz, et al. Crit Care Med. 2019.)