Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 01 1997, 144-147, Vol 35, No. 1
PP Bourbeau, BJ Heiter and M Figdore
Detection of vaginal-anorectal colonization with group B streptococci (GBS)
is critical to the prevention of neonatal GBS disease. The recommended
method for the detection of GBS is culture of the distal vagina and
anorectum in a selective broth medium followed by subculture to solid media
and identification of GBS on the solid media. The purpose of this study was
to compare this standard culture method with the detection of GBS directly
from an enrichment broth by utilizing the Gen-Probe AccuProbe Group B
Streptococcus Culture Identification Test (GPGB). A total of 502 specimens
were tested in this study. Both culture and the GPGB detected 90 of 95
positive specimens (sensitivity, 94.7%). There were two false-positive GPGB
results (specificity, 99.5%). An analysis of 100 consecutive specimens was
performed to compare the costs associated with the use of a primary tryptic
soy agar plate with 5% sheep blood (BAP) and a 3-ml tube of Todd-Hewitt
broth supplemented with 10 micrograms of nalidixic acid per ml and 15
micrograms of colistin per ml (LIM broth) with subculture to another BAP
and the costs associated with the GPGB. Our estimated costs were $3.68 for
a negative culture including 7.0 min of labor, $5.41 for a positive culture
including 8.9 min of labor, and $5.16 for the GPGB including 3.6 min of
labor (based upon a test run of 10 specimens and two controls and a cost of
$70.00 for a 20-test GPGB kit). Accessioning and reporting of results are
not included in these costs. In conclusion, we found that the GPGB was
equivalent in sensitivity to our standard culture method. While overall
costs were somewhat higher for the GPGB, the GPGB has lower labor costs and
offers the potential for incremental savings with higher test volumes and
computer interface capability.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Use of Gen-Probe AccuProbe Group B streptococcus test to detect group B streptococci in broth cultures of vaginal-anorectal specimens from pregnant women: comparison with traditional culture method
Division of Laboratory Medicine, Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, Pennsylvania 17822, USA. pbourbeau@smtp.geisinger.edu
This article has been cited by other articles:
| Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. | Clin. Microbiol. Rev. |
|---|---|
| Clin. Vaccine Immunol. | ALL ASM JOURNALS |
|---|