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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 2004, p. 4067-4071, Vol. 42, No. 9
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.9.4067-4071.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Evaluation of the New VITEK 2 Card for Identification of Clinically Relevant Gram-Negative Rods
Guido Funke* and Pascale Funke-Kissling
Department
of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Gärtner & Colleagues
Laboratories, Weingarten, Germany
Received 27 February 2004/
Returned for modification 13 May 2004/
Accepted 17 May 2004

ABSTRACT
The
VITEK 2 card for gram-negative bacteria (bioMérieux,Marcy-l'Etoile,
France) has been redesigned to improve the
identification of
fermenting and nonfermenting bacilli. Forty-seven
biochemical
tests, including 19 enzymatic tests, are present in the new
card
and interpreted in a kinetic mode. Final identification results
are
available within 10 h. The database allows the
identification
of 159 different taxa. Six hundred fifty-five
gram-negative
rods (GNR; 511 fermenters and 144 nonfermenters),
representing
54 taxa, were tested. Strains were taken from fresh
routine
primary isolation plates (
n = 157), from
stored routine plates
(
n = 301), and from stock
cultures (
n = 197). Six hundred thirty-seven
strains
(97.3%) were correctly identified to the species level,
14
strains (2.1%) gave low discrimination results requiring
additional
tests, and 4 strains (0.6%) gave discordant results;
not a single
strain remained unidentified. Nearly 92% of all
isolates were
correctly identified within 7 h of incubation.
The robustness
of the system was demonstrated by the fact that strains
were
grown on four different agar media before testing. The system
may
also have the potential to be applied directly to primary
isolation
plates, since in this instance 96.2% of 157 GNR were
correctly
identified and 3.8% gave low discrimination results.
The new
VITEK 2 card for gram-negative bacteria seems to be
a promising new
tool for routine, rapid identification of
GNR.

INTRODUCTION
Highly automated identification systems have been introduced
in many
medium- to high-throughput clinical microbiology laboratories
worldwide
within the last 15 years. These systems, such as VITEK
(bioMérieux,
Marcy l'Etoile, France), MicroScan (Dade, West
Sacramento, Calif.),
and PHOENIX (BD, Sparks, Md.), have contributed to
better and
more-cost-effective management of patients by enabling
clinical
microbiologists to identify medically relevant bacteria more
rapidly
and accurately. In a previous article, it was
emphasized that
an important value for a highly
standardized commercial identification
system must be the capability of
the manufacturer to maintain
or even improve the performance of an
identification system
over time
(
2). The new VITEK 2 card
(NGNC; bioMérieux)
for identification of gram-negative rods (GNR)
was recently
created during the evolutionary process of research on and
further
development of the VITEK 2 instrument. The rationale for
designing
the NGNC was to broaden the database and to improve
identification
results. The NGNC contains 47 tests (26 that had been
included
in the previous card and 21 new tests), compared to 41 in the
established
VITEK 2 ID-GNB card (GNC), and 159 taxa are covered by the
new
database corresponding to the NGNC, compared to only 101 for
the
GNC database. While the GNC tests are based on fluorescence
technology,
the NGNC tests are based on colorimetric detection.
Measurements are
required every 15 min for both the GNC and
NGNC tests, and the total
incubation times are up to approximately
10 h for the NGNC
and 3 h for the GNC. The aim of the present
study was to
evaluate the use of the NGNC in a routine clinical
laboratory by a
combination of a weighted laboratory profile
and a stress test
(
7).
(This paper was
presented in part at the 104th General Meeting of the American Society
for Microbiology, New Orleans, Louisiana, 23 to 27 May 2004 [G.
Funke, and P. Funke-Kissling, Abstr. 104th Gen. Meet. Am. Soc.
Microbiol., abstr. C-176,
2004].)

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Strains, culture conditions, and identification.
One hundred
fifty-seven strains of GNR were taken from primary
isolation plates
(Columbia sheep blood agar [BD] [
n =
142] or
MacConkey agar [bioMérieux]
[
n = 15]) set up in our routine
clinical
laboratory for various materials from patients (e.g.,
urine specimens,
wound swabs, respiratory specimens, etc.).
Three hundred one strains
came from primary isolation plates
which had been stored at 4 to
8°C for less than 1 week.
These strains were subcultured on
Columbia sheep blood agar
(BD) (
n = 143), Columbia
sheep blood agar (bioMérieux)
(
n = 4), MacConkey
agar (
n = 77), or Trypticase soy agar
(bioMérieux)
(
n = 77) for 18 to 24 h
at 37°C before they were subjected
to the VITEK 2 analysis. All
strains used from the primary isolation
plates came from unrelated
patients, and consecutive cultures
from the same patient were excluded.
One hundred ninety-seven
strains (stored in Microbank tubes [Mast
Diagnostica, Reinfeld,
Germany] at 70°C) were
taken from our culture collection
and subcultured on Columbia sheep
blood agar (bioMérieux)
(
n = 53), MacConkey agar
(
n = 71), or Trypticase soy agar (
n =
73). The 655 strains used in this study were identified by
conventional
methods (
8,
10), by ID 32 GN and API
20 NE strips
(both from bioMérieux), and by VITEK 1
testing with the
GNI card. Discrepancies between the laboratory
identifications
and the identifications provided by the VITEK 2 system
with
the NGNC were resolved by using API 50CHE and Biotype 100
galleries
(both from bioMérieux), as well as by sequencing 16S
rRNA
genes as previously outlined
(
1).
NGNC and the VITEK 2 instrument.
A bacterial suspension was adjusted
to a McFarland standard of 0.5 in 2.5 ml of a 0.45% sodium
chloride solution with a VITEK 2 DensiChek instrument
(bioMérieux). The time between preparation of the inoculum and
the filling of the card was always less than 30 min. The format of the
NGNC, i.e., a 64-well plastic card, is the same as that of the GNC, but
the NGNC contains 47 tests, while the GNC contains 41 tests (see
above). The NGNC is a fully closed system to which no reagents have to
be added. The card was put on the cassette designed for VITEK 2, placed
in the instrument, automatically filled in a vacuum chamber, sealed,
incubated at 35.5°C, and automatically subjected to a
colorimetric measurement by use of a new optical reading
head every 15 min for a maximum incubation period of
10 h. Data were analyzed using VITEK 2 database version 4.01,
which allows for organism identification in the kinetic mode after
2 h of incubation.
Quality control strains.
During the
3-month evaluation period, the following quality control strains were
checked at regular intervals: Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC
BAA-747, Aeromonas hydrophila ATCC 35654, Brevundimonas
diminuta ATCC 11568, Chryseobacterium
meningosepticum ATCC 13253, Citrobacter freundii ATCC
14135, Enterobacter aerogenes ATCC 13048, Escherichia
coli ATCC 11775, Klebsiella oxytoca ATCC
700324, Proteus vulgaris ATCC 6380, and Pseudomonas
aeruginosa ATCC 9721.
Reporting of results.
The
interpretations provided by the software were taken into account; the
identification scores provided by the software (t index,
probability, likelihood, and confidence) were not. The four result
categories were as follows: (i) correct identification (unambiguous
correct identification to the species level), (ii) low level of
discrimination (either identification to the genus level or low level
of discrimination between two or more species, including the correct
species), (iii) no identification, and (iv) misidentification (the
species identified with the NGNC was different from that identified by
the reference method).

RESULTS
We did
not encounter any major technical problems using the
VITEK 2 instrument
during the evaluation. Quality control strains
were correctly
identified to the species level in every instance,
demonstrating
the reliability of the NGNC as well as the reliability
and reproducibility
of the technique. The hands-on time was
the same for the NGNC
as for the GNC.
Table
1 shows the performance of the NGNC in evaluating the 54 individual taxa
(representing 21 genera) tested. Five hundred eleven strains (42 taxa
and 15 genera) were fermenting bacteria, and 144 strains (12 taxa and 6
genera) were gram-negative nonfermenters. Of the total of 655 strains,
637 (97.3%) were correctly identified to the species level, 14
strains (2.1%) were identified with low discrimination, no
strain remained unidentified, and 4 strains (0.6%) were
misidentified. Identification results were slightly better for
fermenting bacteria, with 98.3% correctly identified,
1.2% identified with low discrimination, and 0.5%
misidentified, than for nonfermenting isolates, with 92.4%
correctly identified, 6.3% identified with low discrimination,
and 1.4% misidentified. The numbers of strains of all taxa
tested were not equal but rather were partly weighted to
reflect the frequencies of different species seen in a routine clinical
laboratory. The 10 most frequently isolated GNR, namely E.
coli, K. pneumoniae, K. oxytoca, Proteus
mirabilis, Proteus vulgaris, Enterobacter
cloacae, Citrobacter freundii, Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, and
Acinetobacter baumannii, represented 52.8% of all
strains included in the present study. Of these, 97.7% were
correctly identified, which is comparable to the result for all 655
strains tested.
No difference in identification results was
observed when different
culture media were used. Of the 285 strains
tested on Columbia
sheep blood agar from BD, 97.5% were
correctly identified, 2.5%
were identified with low
discrimination, and no strain was misidentified.
The rates for correct
identification, identification with low
discrimination, and
misidentification were 96.4, 1.8, and 1.8%,
respectively, for
strains tested on Columbia sheep blood agar
from bioMérieux;
96.9, 1.8, and 1.2, respectively, for
strains tested on MacConkey agar;
and 97.3, 2.0, and 0.7, respectively,
for strains tested on Trypticase
soy agar.
Table
2 lists the strains identified with low discrimination and the
misidentified strains. Differentiation between K.
pneumoniae (indole negative) and K. oxytoca (indole
positive) was readily achieved. The same was true for differentiation
between Pseudomonas aeruginosa (pyocyanin positive and with
growth at 42°C) and Pseudomonas putida (no pyocyanin
and no growth at 42°C) and between Pseudomonas
fluorescens (oxidase positive) and Acinetobacter lwoffii
(oxidase negative). Acinetobacter lwoffii can also be
discerned from the Moraxella group by a negative
oxidase reaction. The reasons for themisidentification of four strains were the following: one
Acinetobacter lwoffii strain lacked tyrosine
arylamidase activity, although there is 99%
positivity for this activity for the Acinetobacter lwoffii
strains in the database; one Enterobacter amnigenus strain
lacked ß-glucuronidase activity, for which there is 81 to
99% positivity for the E. amnigenus biotype strains in
the database, but produced acid from D-sorbitol
and sucrose (there is only 1% positivity for
D-sorbitol production in E. amnigenus biotype 1
strains and 1% positivity for sucrose production in E.
amnigenus biotype 2 strains); one Pseudomonas stutzeri
strain expressed urease activity, for which there is only 1%
positivity for the Pseudomonas stutzeri strains in the
database; and one Rahnella aquatilis strain
expressed N-acetyl-ß-glucosaminidase and
ß-D-xylosidase, although there is only 5%
positivity for each of these expressions for Rahnella
aquatilis strains in the database.
Table
3 gives a detailed report on the exact times required
for final
identification of the strains tested. Nearly 92% of
all strains
were identified within 7 h. Fermenting bacterial
strains were
identified faster than nonfermenting ones.
Table
4 lists the identification results when GNR from primary
plating
media were tested. As in the overall study, a weighted
distribution
of isolates was tested. The results of testing primary
isolation
plates were similar to the results of the overall
study.
Table
5 outlines the other relevant publications concerning
the GNC run on the
VITEK 2 instrument. Except for one study,
all other evaluations tested
both fermenting and nonfermenting
bacteria. The reporting of the
results in some studies differed
from the reporting in our present
evaluation, as an "indeterminate"
category was defined
in four of the other six studies, whereas
only four result categories
were defined in our study. The overall
identification rates were
similar (about 85% correct identifications)
for the four major
studies of the GNC. In contrast, the results
of the present evaluation
of the NGNC were significantly better
(>97% correct
identifications) than the results in the previous
studies, and not a
single strain remained unidentified.

DISCUSSION
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first
study of the
performance of the NGNC in a routine clinical laboratory.
We
were surprised by the overall performance of the system, since
more
than 97% of the isolates were correctly identified to the
species
level without the use of any additional tests. This performance
is
clearly better than the 90% accuracy level which has been
demanded
by some authorities in the field of evaluations of commercial
clinical
microbiology devices
(
9). The taxonomy used in
the database
was very up-to-date, which is not always the case for
commercial
GNR identification systems.
The present study is the
third largest for VITEK 2 cards for GNR identification and the second
largest from a single study center (Table
5). In general, the
extended incubation and reading times as well as the larger database
(for both reactions and number of taxa) led to significantly improved
identification results (97.3% correct identifications to the
species level) when the NGNC instead of the GNC was used (Table
5). It is interesting that
the extension of the database did not lead to poorer identification
results. Not a single strain remained unidentified, whereas in the
previous studies of the GNC, 1.2 to 8.6% of the strains were
unidentified (Table 5).
VITEK 2 users will obtain more precise identification through the use
of the NGNC, although the identification results provided by the GNC
are regarded as acceptable by numerous authors
(2,
3,
4,
6). If the kinetic mode is
used, the overall majority of the results obtained with the NGNC are
available only about 4 h later (Table
3) than those obtained
with the GNC. However, this time frame might be a disadvantage for
microbiology laboratories not providing full 24-h service. Overall, the
NGNC seems to be a promising new tool for rapid identification of GNR
in the routine clinical laboratory. We cannot presently comment on the
cost-effectiveness of the NGNC, as the price of the NGNC was not known
to us at the time this study was done.
It is
recommended that other evaluations include a larger number of strains
from primary isolation plates in order to study whether the VITEK 2
NGNC performs as acceptably as it did in our study, which had only a
limited number of such strains. We also recommend a pure stress test
evaluation that includes nearly all taxa present in the database or GNR
with atypical reactions, since our evaluation, while covering the most
frequently encountered and clinically relevant GNR, nevertheless
covered only a part of the taxa in the database. We encourage the
pursuit of other studies to evaluate the performance of the NGNC in
different countries and under different laboratory conditions, as has
been done with the GNC.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
bioMérieux, La-Balme
les Grottes, France, provided the
study materials.
We thank
Sandrine Pétré, Bernadette Blanc, Geneviève Bossy,
and Daniel Monget for support and valuable discussions during the
evaluation.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding
author. Mailing address: Department of Medical Microbiology and
Hygiene, Gärtner & Colleagues Laboratories, Hoyerstrasse 51,
D-88250 Weingarten, Germany. Phone: 49-751-502-630. Fax:
49-751-502-385. E-mail:
ldg.funke{at}t-online.de.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 2004, p. 4067-4071, Vol. 42, No. 9
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.9.4067-4071.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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