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Collaborative evaluation of the micro-media systems anaerobe susceptibility panel: comparisons with reference methods and test reproducibility
Author(s) -
Ronald N. Jones,
A L Barry,
Jennifer L. Cotton,
Vera L. Sutter,
Jana M. Swenson
Publication year - 1982
Publication title -
journal of clinical microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.349
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1070-633X
pISSN - 0095-1137
DOI - 10.1128/jcm.16.2.245-249.1982
Subject(s) - broth microdilution , reproducibility , agar dilution , agar , microbiology and biotechnology , clinical microbiology , tetracycline , minimum inhibitory concentration , dilution , anaerobic exercise , serial dilution , chromatography , antimicrobial , biology , chemistry , medicine , antibiotics , bacteria , pathology , physiology , genetics , thermodynamics , physics , alternative medicine
The Micro-Media Systems (MMS) anaerobe susceptibility testing panel results from four laboratories were compared for interlaboratory and intralaboratory variations and for the results with the reference agar dilution and a broth microdilution method. The interlaboratory agreement was 98.0% and intralaboratory agreement was 97.3% (+/- 1 log2 dilution). When interpretive criteria for each antimicrobial agent (susceptible, intermediate, and resistant) were assigned, the MMS anaerobic minimum inhibitory concentration data showed an interpretive accuracy of 91.0 and 95.5% for comparisons to the reference agar dilution and the broth methods, respectively. Most significant interpretive errors were considered minor, and nearly half of all errors involved tetracycline, a drug rarely used for serious anaerobic infections. The MMS anaerobe panels appear to be acceptable for selected use in clinical microbiology laboratories.

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