Comparing BioFire FilmArray BCID2 and BCID Panels for Direct Detection of Bacterial Pathogens and Antimicrobial Resistance Genes from Positive Blood Cultures

Abstract
Among molecular assays currently developed for detection and identification of pathogens (and their antimicrobial resistance genes) in positive blood cultures (BCs) (1), the BioFire FilmArray blood culture identification (BCID) panel (bioMérieux, Marcy l’Étoile, France)—a multiplex PCR assay with less than 2 minutes of hands-on time and a ∼1-hour turnaround time—allows syndromic diagnosis of bloodstream infection (BSI) (2, 3). Previously, the panel could identify 24 etiological agents of BSI (11 Gram-negative bacteria, 8 Gram-positive bacteria, and 5 yeast species), as well as three antimicrobial resistance genes (mecA, vanA/B, and blaKPC, which encodes Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase). Now, the BioFire FilmArray BCID2 panel encompasses 43 molecular targets associated with BSI, including 15 Gram-negative bacteria, 11 Gram-positive bacteria, 7 yeast species, and 10 antimicrobial resistance genes (https://www.biomerieux-diagnostics.com/biofire-bcid-panel). The last targets include genes encoding for carbapenemases (IMP, KPC, OXA-48-like, NDM, and VIM), colistin resistance (mcr-1), ESBL (CTX-M), methicillin-resistance (mecA/C and, specifically for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus [MRSA], mecA/C and MREJ [mec right-extremity junction]), or vancomycin resistance (vanA/B). Unlike BCID, no published studies to date reported on the BCID2 performance. This study evaluated and compared the accuracy of BCID2 with that of BCID to identify bacterial species and relative antimicrobial resistance genes directly from positive BCs.

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