Shiga toxin--producing Escherichia coli (STEC) are a leading cause of bacterial enteric infections in the United States. Prompt, accurate diagnosis of STEC infection is important because appropriate treatment early in the course of infection might decrease the risk for serious complications such as renal damage and improve overall patient outcome. In addition, prompt laboratory identification of STEC strains is essential for detecting new and emerging serotypes, for effective and timely outbreak responses and control measures, and for monitoring trends in disease epidemiology. Guidelines for laboratory identification of STEC infections by clinical laboratories were published in 2006. This report provides comprehensive and detailed recommendations for STEC testing by clinical laboratories, including the recommendation that all stools submitted for routine testing from patients with acute community-acquired diarrhea (regardless of patient age, season of the year, or presence or absence of blood in the stool) be simultaneously cultured for E. coli O157:H7 (O157 STEC) and tested with an assay that detects Shiga toxins to detect non-O157 STEC. The report also includes detailed procedures for specimen selection, handling, and transport; a review of culture and nonculture tests for STEC detection; and clinical considerations and recommendations for management of patients with STEC infection. Improving the diagnostic accuracy of STEC infection by clinical laboratories should ensure prompt diagnosis and treatment of these infections in patients and increase detection of STEC outbreaks in the community.
%0 Journal Article
%1 gould_recommendations_2009
%A Gould, L Hannah
%A Bopp, Cheryl
%A Strockbine, Nancy
%A Atkinson, Robyn
%A Baselski, Vickie
%A Body, Barbara
%A Carey, Roberta
%A Crandall, Claudia
%A Hurd, Sharon
%A Kaplan, Ray
%A Neill, Marguerite
%A Shea, Shari
%A Somsel, Patricia
%A Tobin-D'Angelo, Melissa
%A Griffin, Patricia M
%A Gerner-Smidt, Peter
%D 2009
%J MMWR. Recommendations and Reports: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Recommendations and Reports / Centers for Disease Control
%K Bacteriological Chain Contamination, Disease Escherichia Feces, Food Handling, Humans, Immunoassay, Infections, Laboratories, O157, Outbreaks, Polymerase Reaction, Shiga Specimen States Syndrome, Techniques, Toxins, United coli coli, {Hemolytic-Uremic} {Shiga-Toxigenic}
%N RR-12
%P 1--14
%T Recommendations for diagnosis of shiga toxin--producing Escherichia coli infections by clinical laboratories
%U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19834454
%V 58
%X Shiga toxin--producing Escherichia coli (STEC) are a leading cause of bacterial enteric infections in the United States. Prompt, accurate diagnosis of STEC infection is important because appropriate treatment early in the course of infection might decrease the risk for serious complications such as renal damage and improve overall patient outcome. In addition, prompt laboratory identification of STEC strains is essential for detecting new and emerging serotypes, for effective and timely outbreak responses and control measures, and for monitoring trends in disease epidemiology. Guidelines for laboratory identification of STEC infections by clinical laboratories were published in 2006. This report provides comprehensive and detailed recommendations for STEC testing by clinical laboratories, including the recommendation that all stools submitted for routine testing from patients with acute community-acquired diarrhea (regardless of patient age, season of the year, or presence or absence of blood in the stool) be simultaneously cultured for E. coli O157:H7 (O157 STEC) and tested with an assay that detects Shiga toxins to detect non-O157 STEC. The report also includes detailed procedures for specimen selection, handling, and transport; a review of culture and nonculture tests for STEC detection; and clinical considerations and recommendations for management of patients with STEC infection. Improving the diagnostic accuracy of STEC infection by clinical laboratories should ensure prompt diagnosis and treatment of these infections in patients and increase detection of STEC outbreaks in the community.
@article{gould_recommendations_2009,
abstract = {Shiga toxin--producing Escherichia coli {(STEC)} are a leading cause of bacterial enteric infections in the United States. Prompt, accurate diagnosis of {STEC} infection is important because appropriate treatment early in the course of infection might decrease the risk for serious complications such as renal damage and improve overall patient outcome. In addition, prompt laboratory identification of {STEC} strains is essential for detecting new and emerging serotypes, for effective and timely outbreak responses and control measures, and for monitoring trends in disease epidemiology. Guidelines for laboratory identification of {STEC} infections by clinical laboratories were published in 2006. This report provides comprehensive and detailed recommendations for {STEC} testing by clinical laboratories, including the recommendation that all stools submitted for routine testing from patients with acute community-acquired diarrhea (regardless of patient age, season of the year, or presence or absence of blood in the stool) be simultaneously cultured for E. coli {O157:H7} {(O157} {STEC)} and tested with an assay that detects Shiga toxins to detect {non-O157} {STEC.} The report also includes detailed procedures for specimen selection, handling, and transport; a review of culture and nonculture tests for {STEC} detection; and clinical considerations and recommendations for management of patients with {STEC} infection. Improving the diagnostic accuracy of {STEC} infection by clinical laboratories should ensure prompt diagnosis and treatment of these infections in patients and increase detection of {STEC} outbreaks in the community.},
added-at = {2011-03-11T10:05:34.000+0100},
author = {Gould, L Hannah and Bopp, Cheryl and Strockbine, Nancy and Atkinson, Robyn and Baselski, Vickie and Body, Barbara and Carey, Roberta and Crandall, Claudia and Hurd, Sharon and Kaplan, Ray and Neill, Marguerite and Shea, Shari and Somsel, Patricia and {Tobin-D'Angelo}, Melissa and Griffin, Patricia M and {Gerner-Smidt}, Peter},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2f26854eeab2f29453f6ba1813e0a5b99/jelias},
interhash = {627cc99a3caca2b17c90f8e31b0d2ee3},
intrahash = {f26854eeab2f29453f6ba1813e0a5b99},
issn = {1545-8601},
journal = {{MMWR.} Recommendations and Reports: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Recommendations and Reports / Centers for Disease Control},
keywords = {Bacteriological Chain Contamination, Disease Escherichia Feces, Food Handling, Humans, Immunoassay, Infections, Laboratories, O157, Outbreaks, Polymerase Reaction, Shiga Specimen States Syndrome, Techniques, Toxins, United coli coli, {Hemolytic-Uremic} {Shiga-Toxigenic}},
month = oct,
note = {{PMID:} 19834454},
number = {{RR-12}},
pages = {1--14},
timestamp = {2011-03-11T10:06:43.000+0100},
title = {Recommendations for diagnosis of shiga toxin--producing Escherichia coli infections by clinical laboratories},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19834454},
volume = 58,
year = 2009
}