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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2003, p. 2096-2101, Vol. 41, No. 5
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.5.2096-2101.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Evaluation of the Vitek 2 ID-GNB Assay for Identification of Members of the Family Enterobacteriaceae and Other Nonenteric Gram-Negative Bacilli and Comparison with the Vitek GNI+ Card
Caroline M. O'Hara* and J. Michael Miller
Epidemiology and Laboratory Branch, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Received 9 August 2002/
Returned for modification 14 November 2002/
Accepted 19 February 2003

ABSTRACT
We evaluated the Vitek 2 ID-GNB identification card (bioMérieux,
Inc., Durham, N.C.) for its ability to identify members of the
family
Enterobacteriaceae and other gram-negative bacilli that
are isolated in clinical microbiology laboratories. Using 482
enteric stock cultures and 103 strains of oxidase-positive,
gram-negative glucose-fermenting and nonfermenting bacilli that
were maintained at -70°C and passaged three times before
use, we inoculated cards according to the manufacturer's directions
and processed them in a Vitek 2 instrument using version VT2-R02.03
software. All panel identifications were compared to reference
identifications previously confirmed by conventional tube biochemical
assays. At the end of the initial 3-h incubation period, the
Vitek 2 instrument demonstrated an accuracy of 93.0% for the
identification of enteric strains; 414 (85.9%) were correctly
identified at probability levels ranging from excellent to good,
and an additional 34 (7.1%) strains were correctly identified
but at a low level of discrimination. Nineteen (3.9%) strains
were unidentified, and 15 (3.1%) were misidentified. The 19
unidentified strains were scattered among 10 genera. Three of
the 15 misidentified strains were lactose-positive
Salmonella spp. and were identified as
Escherichia coli; another was a
lactose-positive, malonate-negative
Salmonella enterica subsp.
arizonae strain that was identified as
E. coli. Of the 103 glucose-fermenting
and nonfermenting nonenteric strains, 88 (85.4%) were correctly
identified at probability levels ranging from excellent to good,
and 10 (9.7%) were correctly identified, but at a low level
of discrimination, for a total of 95.1% accuracy with this group.
Two strains were unidentified and three were misidentified.
The errors occurred for strains in three different genera. With
the increased hands-off approach of the Vitek 2 instrument and
accuracies of 93% for the identification of enteric organisms
and 95.1% for the identification of nonenteric organisms with
the ID-GNB card, use of this product presents an acceptable
method for the identification of most gram-negative organisms
commonly isolated in the clinical laboratory. A comparison of
these results to those obtained by testing 454 of the same strains
with the Vitek GNI+ card revealed no significant difference
in the abilities of the two cards to identify these organisms
accurately.

INTRODUCTION
Because relatively few commercially available molecular methods
for the identification of clinically significant gram-negative
bacilli in the clinical laboratory exist today, the need for
identification procedures that use more conventional processes
remains. Some of these phenotypic identification procedures
are based on colorimetric or pH-based changes and usually require
18 to 24 h to identify organisms. Some are based on changes
in preformed enzymes, shortening to 2 to 4 h the time necessary
to make an identification.
The newest instrument for bacterial identification and susceptibility testing is Vitek 2 from bioMérieux, Inc. (Durham, N.C.). This is a fully automated system designed to decrease the turnaround time for the identification of bacteria and determination of antimicrobial susceptibilities. The instrument also provides a more hands-off approach than the original Vitek instrument.
The Vitek 2 ID-GNB card is a 64-well card designed for the automated identification of most clinically significant fermenting and nonfermenting gram-negative bacilli.
Because no U.S. studies have evaluated this instrument with an extensive organism library, we tested the ability of the Vitek ID-GNB card and the Vitek 2 instrument to identify strains of the family Enterobacteriaceae as well as glucose-fermenting and -nonfermenting gram-negative bacilli.
(This paper was presented in part at the 102nd General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Salt Lake City, Utah, 19 to 23 May 2002 [C. M. O'Hara and J. M. Miller, Abstr. 102nd Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol., abstr. C14, p. 101, 2002].)

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Culture collection.
A total of 482 biochemically typical and atypical isolates of
the family
Enterobacteriaceae from the stock culture collection
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) were
taken from storage in defibrinated sheep blood at -70°C
and passaged three times on tryptic soy agar with 5% sheep blood
(TSA II; Becton Dickinson Biosciences, Inc., Sparks, Md.) before
use. In addition, 103 biochemically typical and atypical nonenteric,
glucose-fermenting and -nonfermenting gram-negative bacilli
were taken from the CDC stock culture collection. Ten recently
isolated
Salmonella strains from hospitals in the Atlanta, Ga.,
area were obtained from the Georgia Central Public Health Laboratory
and passaged a third time on 5% sheep blood agar before use.
All incubations were performed at 35 ± 1°C, unless
indicated otherwise. ID-GNB cards were inoculated according
to the directions of the manufacturer and processed in the Vitek
2 instrument with software version VT2-R02.02 (8 June 2000).
Final test results were available in approximately 3 h.
Media and biochemical tests.
Biochemical tests for the identification of enteric organisms were performed with conventional media and by the methods described by Edwards and Ewing (1), with some modifications by Hickman and Farmer (4) and Farmer et al. (2). Biochemical tests for identification of nonenteric organisms were performed by the methods of Weyant et al. (10) and Schreckenberger (9). Commercial media were used whenever possible.
Vitek 2 system.
The Vitek 2 system is a fully automated, continuous-access testing system that can accommodate 60 identification or susceptibility cards at one time in one module. Additional modules that extend the capacity in increments of 60 cards are available.
The inoculation of cards begins with the preparation of a standardized bacterial suspension in 0.45% saline equivalent to a McFarland 0.5 to 0.63 standard, the range indicated by the manufacturer. The suspensions are standardized in a Densi-Chek 2, which is first adjusted with a semisolid calibrator. The suspensions are then placed into the Smart Carrier boat on the Smart Carrier cassette. The boat and cassette each contain a memory chip with information for the suspensions in that load. If a susceptibility test is to be performed simultaneously with the identification, an additional blank tube with 0.45% saline is placed in alternating slots. The time between suspension preparation and card filling for 10 isolates is less than 20 min. Suspensions are prepared in groups of 12 or less.
The ID-GNB cards each have a bar-coded label that is scanned into the memory chip before the cards are loaded into the corresponding slot.
Once the Smart Carrier boat is loaded into the Vitek 2 instrument, the instrument automatically reads the information from the memory chip, makes the dilution that is necessary if a susceptibility test is to be included, fills the test cards, severs the filling straws from the cards, and incubates the cards for 3 h. When the process is complete, onboard software and automation move the cards to the discard area, analyze the data, and print the results.
ID-GNB card.
The ID-GNB card is a 64-well card that contains 41 biochemical tests (13 more substrates than the number included on the GNI+ card) and two negative control wells. Of the 41 biochemical tests, 21 are with conventional substrates that include adonitol, L-arabinose, D-cellobiose, D-galacturonate, D-glucose, D-glucuronate, myo-inositol, D-maltose, D-mannitol, D-melibiose, palatinose, D-raffinose, L-rhamnose, saccharose, D-sorbitol, D-trehalose, lysine and ornithine decarboxylases, urease, malonate, and tryptophane deaminase. Twenty wells contain preformed enzymes. These include glucose-1-phosphate, 5-keto-D-gluconate,
-arabinosidase,
-galactosidase,
-glutamate, ß-cellobiosidase, ß-galactosidase, ß-glucosidase, ß-glucuronidase, ß-mannosidase, ß-N-acetyl-glucosaminidase, ß-N-acetyl-galactosaminidase, ß-xylosidase, Glu-Gly-Arg arylamidase,
-glutamyl-transferase, L-lysine arylamidase, phosphatase, L-proline arylamidase, L-pyrrolidonyl arylamidase, and CBZ-arginine arylamidase. The remaining wells are empty. Differences in the substrates between this card and the GNI+ card can be seen by consulting the respective product inserts.
Occasionally, additional off-line same-day testing may be required to complete an identification. Those tests listed by the manufacturer for the completion of an identification were performed with CDC conventional biochemicals. These included tests for indole production, motility, oxidase, ß-hemolysis, and determination of brown, orange, purple, red, or yellow pigments.
Taxonomy.
Organism identifications were taken from the Vitek database, even though some taxonomic changes may have occurred since the database was compiled.
Classification of answers.
Answers may be categorized into one of several confidence levels (excellent, very good, good, acceptable), all of which are an estimate of how closely a given profile corresponds to a particular taxon relative to all the other taxa in the database. The percentage of identification ranges from 99.9 to 80.0%. This value is extrapolated from the t index, which is an estimate of how closely the profile corresponds to the most typical set of reactions for each taxon and which is actually calculated from the algorithm. The value of the t index varies between 0 and 1 and is inversely proportional to the number of atypical tests. Thus, a confidence level of excellent is a combination of a percentage of identification of
99.9% and a t index of
0.75. A confidence level of acceptable combines a percentage of identification of
80.0% and a t index of
0. In the case of a low level of discrimination, supplementary tests are proposed.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The 482 enteric strains tested in this study included 21 genera
and 60 species (Table
1). They represented most major species
of the family
Enterobacteriaceae, and all were of human origin.
Because the CDC is usually not given patient histories when
isolates are submitted, it is not known if they were clinically
relevant, but most of the sources would indicate that the possibility
of clinical relevance might exist. At the end of the initial
3-h incubation period, 414 (85.9%) isolates were correctly identified
at confidence levels ranging from excellent to good. Another
34 (7.1%) were correctly identified, but at a low level of discrimination.
In the clinical setting, these results would have to be carefully
evaluated to determine if they were correct. The Vitek 2 instrument
could not identify 19 (3.9%) of the 482 isolates and gave an
answer of "unidentified organism." Fifteen (3.1%) strains were
incorrectly identified (Table
2), although six were at least
in the correct genus. Most of these incorrect identifications
were at the low level of discrimination.
Of special interest in Table
2 are the lactose-positive
Salmonella strains, one of which was
Salmonella enterica subsp.
arizonae.
All four of these isolates were identified as
Escherichia coli at the very good probability level.
Table 3 shows the test results for 103 isolates of nonenteric gram-negative bacilli that were a mixture of glucose-fermenting and glucose-nonfermenting, oxidase-positive and oxidase-negative organisms. They include 21 genera and 30 species. At the end of the initial incubation period, 88 (85.4%) strains were correctly identified at probability levels ranging from excellent to good. Ten (9.7%) were correctly identified, but at a low level of probability, and three (2.9%) were misidentified. The latter three included one isolate each of Aeromonas sobria, Brevundimonas vesicularis, and Empedobacter brevis. Two (1.9%) strains were not identified.
Table
4 presents a comparison of the results of this study and
those of the four other studies of the Vitek 2 instrument that
have been published. There is no significant difference in the
results obtained in this study compared with those obtained
by Funke et al. (
3) or Jossart and Courcol (
5), although the
smaller studies of Joyanes et al. (
6), Ling et al. (
7), and
Sanders et al. (
8) showed significantly better results.
Table
5 shows a comparison of the results obtained when 454
of the same strains listed in Table
1 were tested with the Vitek
GNI+ card. Table
5 lists those strains that were correctly identified,
unidentified, or identified in error. The 25 strains in the
tests with the ID-GNB card and the 8 strains in the tests with
the GNI+ card for which there was a low probability of correct
identification are not listed in Table
5. Even though the error
rate was higher (4.6%) with the GNI+ card, only 1.7% of the
identifications had low-probability confidence levels, whereas
with the ID-GNB card, 5.5% of the identifications had low-probability
confidence levels. Thus, there is no significant difference
in the abilities of these two cards to identify these strains
accurately (Yates' corrected
P value, >0.05).
The question of the relative acceptable level of accuracy when
a "system" approach is used for identification is often posed.
This is a decision that must be made by each laboratory after
it takes into consideration many variables. The two most prominent
of these variables are the source of the specimen and whether
the susceptibility pattern matches the identification of the
organism. For example, an identification of
Pantoea agglomerans from urine might not merit the same amount of concern that it
would if it was isolated from blood or spinal fluid. Some laboratories
are not willing to accept an answer that has less than an 85%
probability of being accurate; others want an answer that is
at least 90% accurate. Another consideration is whether the
laboratory is able or willing in terms of time and money to
perform the additional testing needed.
The hands-off approach to the Vitek 2 instrument with the Smart Carrier station is a major improvement of the Vitek instrument. Having demonstrated an overall accuracy above 90%, testing with the ID-GNB card presents an acceptable method for the identification of the most commonly isolated members of the family Enterobacteriaceae and nonenteric gram-negative bacilli.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Epidemiology and Laboratory Branch, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Mailstop C16, Atlanta, GA 30333. Phone: (404) 639-2316. Fax: (404) 639-3822. E-mail:
cmo1{at}cdc.gov.

Present address: Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Program, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333. 

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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, May 2003, p. 2096-2101, Vol. 41, No. 5
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.5.2096-2101.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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