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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- What is rapid AST/DST?
- How fast is fast?
- How RAST is fast?
- Is TB the worst offender?
- Types of test
- King (Monarch) of the Mountain
- How to reduce the emergence of resistance?
- The bottom line
- Current workflow
- RAST workflow
- Making the best test
- The best test?
- How fast is SLIC?
- SLIC
- Seeing a little further with SLIC
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- Definition of RAST
- RAST for TB
- Types of test
- How to reduce emergence of resistance
- Current workflow
- Scattered light integrating collector (SLIC)
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Hammond, R. (2024, November 28). Innovative approaches to rapid antibiotic resistance testing [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 19, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/NXHD4363.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- There are no commercial/financial matters to disclose.
A selection of talks on Infectious Diseases
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello. My name is
Dr. Robert Hammond.
I'm a lecturer at the
University of St
Andrews in Scotland.
Today, I'm going to be taking
you through a talk about
the innovative approaches to
rapid antibiotic
resistance testing.
0:14
What is rapid AST or DST?
In terms of this talk,
AST and DST are the same thing.
AST is antimicrobial
susceptibility testing
and DST is drug
susceptibility testing.
These come down to
the same thing.
Do excuse me if during
the course of the talk
I say drug, I will
always mean antibiotic
and we're talking about
AST and DST today.
So talking about
susceptibility testing.
That necessarily has us talking
about antimicrobial
resistance, of course,
which I'll get into a
little bit later on.
0:46
How fast is fast?
This entire talk is about
the rapidity of techniques
and technologies to try
and combat AMR,
antimicrobial resistance,
by testing with antimicrobial
susceptibility testing.
In April of 2022, EUCAST,
which is a European group, who
designates the effects
of antibiotics for
clinicians and for health
care workers, defined
rapidity as less than four hours
in terms of a technology
or a technique.
Numerous studies have
defined rapidity as
equal to less than two hours
for their various technologies.
That's if they're promoting
their own or if they're
talking about others,
and the Longitude Prize
which has been going
on for many years,
and at time of recording
is going to be
announcing its winner very soon,
called rapidity less
than 30 minutes.
Which is a tall order for
anybody but let's
see what we can
get in the pattern literature
available at time of recording.
We see one of these
patterns gives us
results in six hours
but frequently
more than 48 hours for
this particular technology.
That's good at six hours,
but it doesn't quite fall within
our brackets for rapid there.
Next one down says
less than 12 hours from
Helios. Again, interesting.
I'm sure it's a
wonderful technology,
but unfortunately
doesn't quite fall
within our rapid time frame.
Next one down here, a
Phenotypic testing,
we'll get into what
that means later.
Results in about 3.5
hours. That's good.
That's getting into the
realm of rapid for us and if
it's always around 3.5 hours
or less, that's excellent.
Then this lower one has
a fairly broad range
of 5-90 minutes
but is well within most of
our definitions
here for rapidity,
especially that lower number
of around five minutes.
You can see within the
technology available at time of
recording and the ones
coming through it
in patent scanning,
there is considerable scope
and considerable range in
the technology of how we talk
about rapidity and
what it means.