Use and quality of point-of-care microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing for urinalysis in general practice

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Use and quality of point-of-care microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing for urinalysis in general practice. / Kollerup, Ida; Aagaard Thomsen, Anne Kathrine; Kornum, Jette Brommann; Paulsen, Kirsten Inger; Bjerrum, Lars; Hansen, Malene Plejdrup.

I: Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, Bind 40, Nr. 1, 2022, s. 3-10.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kollerup, I, Aagaard Thomsen, AK, Kornum, JB, Paulsen, KI, Bjerrum, L & Hansen, MP 2022, 'Use and quality of point-of-care microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing for urinalysis in general practice', Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, bind 40, nr. 1, s. 3-10. https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2021.2022349

APA

Kollerup, I., Aagaard Thomsen, A. K., Kornum, J. B., Paulsen, K. I., Bjerrum, L., & Hansen, M. P. (2022). Use and quality of point-of-care microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing for urinalysis in general practice. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 40(1), 3-10. https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2021.2022349

Vancouver

Kollerup I, Aagaard Thomsen AK, Kornum JB, Paulsen KI, Bjerrum L, Hansen MP. Use and quality of point-of-care microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing for urinalysis in general practice. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care. 2022;40(1):3-10. https://doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2021.2022349

Author

Kollerup, Ida ; Aagaard Thomsen, Anne Kathrine ; Kornum, Jette Brommann ; Paulsen, Kirsten Inger ; Bjerrum, Lars ; Hansen, Malene Plejdrup. / Use and quality of point-of-care microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing for urinalysis in general practice. I: Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care. 2022 ; Bind 40, Nr. 1. s. 3-10.

Bibtex

@article{7cbf072644254360bf542614f81d021c,
title = "Use and quality of point-of-care microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing for urinalysis in general practice",
abstract = "Objective: To describe the use and quality of point-of-care (P OC) microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing performed in general practice in Northern Denmark from 2013 to 2018.Design: Descriptive study Setting: General practices receiving a fee for examining urine samples.Subjects: Simulated urine samples containing uropathogenic bacteria distributed by the organisation for improvement of microbiological quality (MIKAP).Main outcome measures: Percentage of use and correct answers for microscopy, culture and susceptibility testing.Results: A total of 5361 samples were analysed by the use of microscopy (39.7%), culture (66.0%) and/or susceptibility testing (76.5%). For culture, Flexicult SSI urinary kittm (87.6%) demonstrated the highest percentage of correct answers followed by chromogenic agar (85.1%) and 2-plate dipslide (85.2%). Mueller Hinton agar with tablets had the highest percentage of correct answers for susceptibility testing of most bacterial strains (84.6%), followed by Flexicult (77.2%). Furthermore, susceptibility testing with tablets (range: 76.1-84.6%) was found to be more accurate than discs (range: 72.9-75.5%). Overall, the highest percentage of correct answers was obtained when examining urine samples containing Escherichia coli: Microscopy (78.3%), culture (87.0%) and susceptibility testing (range: 84.3-90.7%).Conclusion: The quality of P OC testing in general practice was high when examining urine samples containing the most common uropathogen E. coli. Surprisingly, susceptibility testing was more frequently used than culture. This approach may compromise the treatment decision as only cultures contribute with information about the flora composition and bacterial quantification. Interestingly, microscopy was the least used method even though the result may be reached within a few minutes.Key pointsThe quality of POC tests (microscopy, urine culture, susceptibility testing) performed in general practice was high when examining urine containing E. coli, whereas difficulties were observed for samples including S. saprophyticus or K. pneumoniae.Susceptibility testing was more often performed than urine culture, which indicates a problem as only urine cultures contribute with information about the flora composition and bacterial quantification.",
author = "Ida Kollerup and {Aagaard Thomsen}, {Anne Kathrine} and Kornum, {Jette Brommann} and Paulsen, {Kirsten Inger} and Lars Bjerrum and Hansen, {Malene Plejdrup}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1080/02813432.2021.2022349",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "3--10",
journal = "Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care",
issn = "0281-3432",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Use and quality of point-of-care microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing for urinalysis in general practice

AU - Kollerup, Ida

AU - Aagaard Thomsen, Anne Kathrine

AU - Kornum, Jette Brommann

AU - Paulsen, Kirsten Inger

AU - Bjerrum, Lars

AU - Hansen, Malene Plejdrup

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Objective: To describe the use and quality of point-of-care (P OC) microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing performed in general practice in Northern Denmark from 2013 to 2018.Design: Descriptive study Setting: General practices receiving a fee for examining urine samples.Subjects: Simulated urine samples containing uropathogenic bacteria distributed by the organisation for improvement of microbiological quality (MIKAP).Main outcome measures: Percentage of use and correct answers for microscopy, culture and susceptibility testing.Results: A total of 5361 samples were analysed by the use of microscopy (39.7%), culture (66.0%) and/or susceptibility testing (76.5%). For culture, Flexicult SSI urinary kittm (87.6%) demonstrated the highest percentage of correct answers followed by chromogenic agar (85.1%) and 2-plate dipslide (85.2%). Mueller Hinton agar with tablets had the highest percentage of correct answers for susceptibility testing of most bacterial strains (84.6%), followed by Flexicult (77.2%). Furthermore, susceptibility testing with tablets (range: 76.1-84.6%) was found to be more accurate than discs (range: 72.9-75.5%). Overall, the highest percentage of correct answers was obtained when examining urine samples containing Escherichia coli: Microscopy (78.3%), culture (87.0%) and susceptibility testing (range: 84.3-90.7%).Conclusion: The quality of P OC testing in general practice was high when examining urine samples containing the most common uropathogen E. coli. Surprisingly, susceptibility testing was more frequently used than culture. This approach may compromise the treatment decision as only cultures contribute with information about the flora composition and bacterial quantification. Interestingly, microscopy was the least used method even though the result may be reached within a few minutes.Key pointsThe quality of POC tests (microscopy, urine culture, susceptibility testing) performed in general practice was high when examining urine containing E. coli, whereas difficulties were observed for samples including S. saprophyticus or K. pneumoniae.Susceptibility testing was more often performed than urine culture, which indicates a problem as only urine cultures contribute with information about the flora composition and bacterial quantification.

AB - Objective: To describe the use and quality of point-of-care (P OC) microscopy, urine culture and susceptibility testing performed in general practice in Northern Denmark from 2013 to 2018.Design: Descriptive study Setting: General practices receiving a fee for examining urine samples.Subjects: Simulated urine samples containing uropathogenic bacteria distributed by the organisation for improvement of microbiological quality (MIKAP).Main outcome measures: Percentage of use and correct answers for microscopy, culture and susceptibility testing.Results: A total of 5361 samples were analysed by the use of microscopy (39.7%), culture (66.0%) and/or susceptibility testing (76.5%). For culture, Flexicult SSI urinary kittm (87.6%) demonstrated the highest percentage of correct answers followed by chromogenic agar (85.1%) and 2-plate dipslide (85.2%). Mueller Hinton agar with tablets had the highest percentage of correct answers for susceptibility testing of most bacterial strains (84.6%), followed by Flexicult (77.2%). Furthermore, susceptibility testing with tablets (range: 76.1-84.6%) was found to be more accurate than discs (range: 72.9-75.5%). Overall, the highest percentage of correct answers was obtained when examining urine samples containing Escherichia coli: Microscopy (78.3%), culture (87.0%) and susceptibility testing (range: 84.3-90.7%).Conclusion: The quality of P OC testing in general practice was high when examining urine samples containing the most common uropathogen E. coli. Surprisingly, susceptibility testing was more frequently used than culture. This approach may compromise the treatment decision as only cultures contribute with information about the flora composition and bacterial quantification. Interestingly, microscopy was the least used method even though the result may be reached within a few minutes.Key pointsThe quality of POC tests (microscopy, urine culture, susceptibility testing) performed in general practice was high when examining urine containing E. coli, whereas difficulties were observed for samples including S. saprophyticus or K. pneumoniae.Susceptibility testing was more often performed than urine culture, which indicates a problem as only urine cultures contribute with information about the flora composition and bacterial quantification.

U2 - 10.1080/02813432.2021.2022349

DO - 10.1080/02813432.2021.2022349

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35023809

VL - 40

SP - 3

EP - 10

JO - Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care

JF - Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care

SN - 0281-3432

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 290232522