Developmental roadmap for antimicrobial susceptibility testing systems

the JPIAMR AMR-RDT Working Group on Antimicrobial Resistance and Rapid Diagnostic Testing(bioMérieux (France)), Alex van Belkum(bioMérieux (France)), Till T. Bachmann(Curetis (Germany)), Gerd Lüdke(University of Copenhagen), Jan Gorm Lisby(University of Copenhagen), Gunnar Kahlmeter(bioMérieux (United States)), Allan Mohess(University of Münster), Karsten Becker(University of Münster), John P. Hays(Erasmus MC), Neil Woodford(Public Health England), Konstantinos Mitsakakis(Hahn-Schickard-Gesellschaft für angewandte Forschung), Jacob Moran‐Gilad(Ben-Gurion University of the Negev), Jordi Vilà(Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy and Immunology), Harald Peter(Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy and Immunology), John Rex(bioMérieux (United States)), W. Michael Dunne(bioMérieux (United States))
Nature Reviews Microbiology
October 17, 2018
Cited by 312Open Access
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Abstract

Antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) technologies help to accelerate the initiation of targeted antimicrobial therapy for patients with infections and could potentially extend the lifespan of current narrow-spectrum antimicrobials. Although conceptually new and rapid AST technologies have been described, including new phenotyping methods, digital imaging and genomic approaches, there is no single major, or broadly accepted, technological breakthrough that leads the field of rapid AST platform development. This might be owing to several barriers that prevent the timely development and implementation of novel and rapid AST platforms in health-care settings. In this Consensus Statement, we explore such barriers, which include the utility of new methods, the complex process of validating new technology against reference methods beyond the proof-of-concept phase, the legal and regulatory landscapes, costs, the uptake of new tools, reagent stability, optimization of target product profiles, difficulties conducting clinical trials and issues relating to quality and quality control, and present possible solutions. This Consensus Statement presents the barriers that currently prevent the timely development and implementation of novel and rapid antimicrobial susceptibility testing platforms, including the costs involved, uptake of new tools, legal and regulatory aspects, difficulties conducting clinical trials and quality control, and presents possible solutions.


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