Publication | Open Access
Detection of bacterial DNA in blood samples from febrile patients: underestimated infection or emerging contamination?
39
Citations
13
References
2004
Year
Blood SamplesEngineeringPathogen DetectionPathologyBacterial DnaNucleic Acid Amplification TestBacterial PathogensPolymerase Chain ReactionHealthcare-associated InfectionInfection ControlUnderestimated InfectionMolecular DiagnosticsLaboratory MedicineAntimicrobial ResistanceClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyBlood Culture OutcomeMolecular Diagnostic TechniquesAntimicrobial SusceptibilityAmplification ResultsUnexpected PathogensNucleic Acid AmplificationMicrobiologyMedicineDiagnostic Microbiology
We applied real-time broad-range polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect bacteraemia in blood from febrile patients. Interpretation of amplification results in relation to clinical data and blood culture outcome was complex, although the reproducibility of the PCR results was good. Sequencing analysis of the PCR products revealed the presence of Burkholderia species DNA while no Burkholderia species grew in culture. The source of this contamination was shown to be the commercial DNA isolation kit used in the automated MagNA Pure Isolation Robot. A high degree of suspicion is required when uncommon or unexpected pathogens are diagnosed by molecular methods as clinical consequences can be serious.
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