Susceptibility Testing
As follow up to a positive bacterial or fungal culture; when you have an infection and one or more types of bacteria or fungi have been grown and isolated in a culture from a sample obtained from the site of suspected infection; when your infection is not responding to treatment
A sample of a pure culture of bacteria or fungi grown and isolated from an infected body site
No test preparation is needed
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Bacterial Susceptibility Testing
When a healthcare professional suspects that a patient has a bacterial infection, they request a “culture and susceptibility test” to help determine the cause (often referred to as a “culture and sensitivity,” - sensitivity is a more casual term for susceptibility). Susceptibility is the likelihood that a particular antibiotic will be effective in killing or sufficiently inhibiting the growth of specific bacteria that is causing an infection. Susceptibility testing measures whether or not the bacteria can grow when it is exposed to a variety of antibiotics in a laboratory test. These are usually the first-line and sometimes second- line antibiotics that are commonly used to treat that specific bacteria.
A culture of the infected area must be carried out in order to obtain the organism for identification and to allow susceptibility testing to be performed, if warranted. Referred to by the type of body fluid or cells collected (such as: blood culture, urine culture, sputum culture, wound culture, etc.), the culture involves incubating a sample at body temperature in a nutrient- rich environment. This process promotes the growth (replication) of any microorganisms present in the sample. Samples from the skin, stool, or sputum will grow normal flora as well as pathogenic bacteria if they are present. Other body samples, such as blood and urine, are usually sterile; they will show little or no growth unless a pathogenic microorganism is present.
The pathogenic bacteria are isolated (separated out from any other microorganisms present) and identified using a variety of tests. Each type of bacteria that may be clinically significant in the specimen (a pathogen) is tested individually to determine the ability of antibiotics to inhibit its growth. Susceptibility testing is performed by growing the pure bacterial isolate in the presence of varying concentrations of several antibiotics. The amount of growth of the bacteria is then examined in order to determine which antibiotics inhibit the growth of the bacteria and the specific concentrations at which they do so. Results of the testing are reported as either “Susceptible” (likely, but not guaranteed to inhibit the pathogenic microorganism), “Susceptible, increased exposure/Intermediate” (may be effective at a higher than normal concentration), or “Resistant” (not effective at inhibiting the growth of the organism). If there is more than one pathogen, the laboratory will report results for each one.
Doctors choose an appropriate antibiotic from those reported as “Susceptible.” If there are no “Susceptible” choices, then the doctor may select one that was reported as “Susceptible, increased exposure/Intermediate.” This may mean a higher dosage of antibiotics and may involve a longer duration of therapy and a higher risk of side effects. Bacteria may be “Resistant” to all of the antibiotics that are usually used to treat that type of infection. If this is the case, then the doctor may prescribe a combination of antibiotics that work together to inhibit the bacteria when neither one alone will be effective. These drug therapies may be more expensive and have to be given intravenously, sometimes for extended periods of time. Some infections due to resistant bacteria have proven very difficult to treat.
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Bacterial Resistance
Bacterial resistance may be innate (natural) or acquired. Some bacteria have an innate resistance to a specific antibiotic target. Antibiotics may specifically target bacteria whilst they multiply by inhibiting the process, destroy the bacterial cell wall or inhibit bacterial metabolism, a process that is important in the survival of bacteria. This resistance, innate resistance, is part of the bacteria’s normal physical characteristics. Since bacteria multiply very rapidly, they go through many generations in a short period of time. There is always the potential for antimicrobial resistance to arise through a genetic change (mutation). If this change gives the bacteria a survival advantage, it gets passed on to subsequent generations. This is acquired resistance.
Acquired resistance may develop through a selection process. When a patient is treated with an antibiotic, the most susceptible bacteria are killed first. If treatment is stopped before all of the pathogenic bacteria are killed, the survivors may develop a resistance to that particular antibiotic. The next time the patient is exposed to the same drug, it may be ineffective as the bacteria and their progeny are likely to retain resistance to that antibiotic.
Resistance can also develop when bacteria that are resistant share their genetic material with susceptible bacteria. This may occur more frequently in a healthcare setting, where many patients are treated with antimicrobials and many have compromised immune systems. For instance, resistant strains of bacteria, such as MRSA (meticillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus), have been a problem in hospitals for decades and are now becoming common in the community.
When a resistance trait arises in bacteria, for whatever reason, the resistant organism may spread to other people, throughout a community, and potentially across the world. Once a strain of bacteria has become resistant to one or more drugs, the only recourse is to try to inhibit its spread and to try to find another drug that will kill it. The second or third choice of drugs that are available are often more expensive and toxic (associated with more side effects). This challenge is compounded by the fact that bacteria are becoming resistant faster than new antibiotics are being developed.
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Prevention
Sooner or later, every antibiotic will have one or more strains of bacteria that are resistant to it, and eventually its usefulness will diminish. The best that we can do is to try to push that time further into the future, to use antibiotics appropriately, and prolong the time that they are effective. Steps that we can take are listed below.
Things that you can do:
- Don’t ask for antibiotics when you don’t need them, such as when you or your child has a viral illness, such as the common cold or flu. (For a good source of information for parents on common illnesses in children, what causes them, and appropriate treatments, visit the following link: http://www.dobugsneeddrugs.org/parents/index.html.)
- When prescribed, take the full course of antibiotics as instructed (although there is some controversy for specific situations - see for example this article 'Is it time to stop counselling patients to “finish the course of antibiotics”?' - PMC (nih.gov).
- Don’t take your own or anyone else’s left over antibiotics.
- Limit the use of antibacterial products.
- For multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, consider taking part in directly observed treatment (DOT) and commit yourself to the months of treatment prescribed.
Things your community and doctor can do:
- Do not over prescribe antibiotics.
- Track outbreaks of resistant bacteria; prompt identification, isolation, and treatment can minimise their spread.
Things that are being done on a national level:
- Reduction of the use of antibiotics in animal feed, only using what is necessary to keep animals healthy, not to promote faster growth. Avoiding the use of antibiotics that are commonly used to treat people. (This is a growing area of concern as resistant bacterial strains can arise in the treated animals and then share their resistance with pathogenic bacteria that affect humans).
- Promotion of the wise usage of antibiotics.
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Common Questions
Would a doctor ever prescribe an antibiotic without or before performing a culture?
Yes. In certain situations, a doctor may choose a therapy while a culture is incubating and in others, he may prescribe an antibiotic without ever requesting a culture.
While it is impossible to predict which bacteria is causing an infection unless a culture is performed, some organisms are seen more frequently than others. For instance, most urinary tract infections (UTIs) are caused by the bacterium Escherichia coli. Knowing this, a doctor may rely on their experience to deduce which “bug” is most likely to be causing the infection and therefore choose a drug that is effective in most cases.
In addition, there are certain life-threatening infections that must be treated immediately, with no time to wait for the results of a culture. For instance, a patient presenting with suspected meningitis will require treatment right away as this is a life-threatening infection. In other instances, a culture would not be attempted because a specimen may not be obtainable (such as with otitis media – ear infections) or the pathogen may not be easily isolated from other flora in the specimen (such as with community-acquired pneumonia). In these cases, the doctor chooses therapy to cover the most common pathogens that cause these infections.