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TGen North Develops Screening Test For Hospital-Acquired Infections

Klebsiella bacteria
(Photo by Dr. David Dorward - National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease)
The Klebsiella bacteria (red) interacts with a white blood cell.

Tens of thousands of patients die every year from infections they pick up while they’re in the hospital. An Arizona-based institute has developed a screening test to find these infections early, before symptoms appear.

The test is designed for Klebsiella pneumoniae, an organism that causes pneumonia and bloodstream infections.

Jolene Bowers, a molecular biologist at the Translational Genomics Research Institute in Flagstaff (TGen North) said the new test can look for infectious organisms in hundreds of patients at a time.

“So a lot of these organisms will hide out on these patients or in these patients, and nobody knows that they’re there until they surface in an infection,” Bowers said. “But what we’re trying to do is catch that before it happens.”

The test uses DNA sequencing to identify the strain of bacteria, because some strains are more deadly than others. It also looks for antibiotic resistance. Bowers plans to expand it to include other common hospital infections.

A description of the method will appear in the Journal of Clinical Microbiology in October.

Healthcare-Associated Infections In Arizona

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Melissa Sevigny is a reporter at KNAU in Flagstaff.