Login / Signup

Sedimentation Field-Flow Fractionation: A Diagnostic Tool for Rapid Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing.

Audrey GauthierLinda TliliSerge BattuSylvie DelebasséeRaphaël Emmanuel DuvalPhilippe J P CardotMarie-Cécile PloyFabrice LallouéColine Le-MoanOlivier BarraudGaëlle Bégaud
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2023)
Conventional antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) methods require 24-48 h to provide results, creating the need for a probabilistic antibiotic therapy that increases the risk of antibiotic resistance emergence. Consequently, the development of rapid AST methods has become a priority. Over the past decades, sedimentation field-flow fractionation (SdFFF) has demonstrated high sensitivity in early monitoring of induced biological events in eukaryotic cell populations. This proof-of-concept study aimed at investigating SdFFF for the rapid assessment of bacterial susceptibility to antibiotics. Three bacterial species were included ( Escherichia coli , Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa ) with two panels of antibiotics tailored to each bacterial species. The results demonstrate that SdFFF, when used in "Hyperlayer" elution mode, enables monitoring of antibiotic-induced morphological changes. The percentage variation of the retention factor (PΔ R ) was used to quantify the biological effect of antibiotics on bacteria with the establishment of a threshold value of 16.8% to differentiate susceptible and resistant strains. The results obtained with SdFFF were compared to that of the AST reference method, and a categorical agreement of 100% was observed. Overall, this study demonstrates the potential of SdFFF as a rapid method for the determination of antibiotic susceptibility or resistance since it is able to provide results within a shorter time frame than that needed for conventional methods (3-4 h vs 16-24 h, respectively), enabling earlier targeted antibiotic therapy. Further research and validation are necessary to establish the effectiveness and reliability of SdFFF in clinical settings.
Keyphrases