Issue 8, 2024

A capillary-based centrifugal indicator equipped with in situ pathogenic bacteria culture for fast antimicrobial susceptibility testing

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance has become a major global health threat due to the misuse and overuse of antibiotics. Rapid, affordable, and high-efficiency antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) is among the effective means to solve this problem. Herein, we developed a capillary-based centrifugal indicator (CBCI) equipped with an in situ culture of pathogenic bacteria for fast AST. The bacterial incubation and growth were performed by macro-incubation, which seamlessly integrated the capillary indicator. Through simple centrifugation, all the bacterial cells were confined at the nanoliter-level capillary column. The packed capillary column height could linearly reflect the bacterial count, and the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was determined based on the difference in the column height between the drug-added groups and the control group. The AST results could easily be determined by the naked eye or smartphone imaging. Thus, the CBCI realized the combination of macro-bacterial incubation and early micro assessment, which accelerated the phenotypic AST without complex microscopic counting or fluorescent labelling. The whole operation process was simple and easy to use. AST results could be determined for E. coli ATCC strains within 3.5 h, and the output results for clinical samples were consistent with the hospital reports. We expect this AST platform to become a useful tool in limiting antimicrobial resistance, especially in remote/resource-limited areas or in underdeveloped countries.

Graphical abstract: A capillary-based centrifugal indicator equipped with in situ pathogenic bacteria culture for fast antimicrobial susceptibility testing

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Dec 2023
Accepted
01 Mar 2024
First published
05 Mar 2024

Analyst, 2024,149, 2420-2427

A capillary-based centrifugal indicator equipped with in situ pathogenic bacteria culture for fast antimicrobial susceptibility testing

L. Chen, M. Zhu, Z. Wang, H. Wang, Y. Cheng, Z. Zhang, X. Qi, Y. Shao, X. Zhang and H. Wang, Analyst, 2024, 149, 2420 DOI: 10.1039/D3AN02144K

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