§ 493.911 - Bacteriology.  


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  • § 493.911 Bacteriology.

    (a) Types of services offered by laboratories. In bacteriology, for proficiency testing purposes, there are five types of laboratories:

    (1) Those that interpret Gram stains or perform primary inoculation, or both; and refer cultures to another laboratory appropriately certified for the subspecialty of bacteriology for identification;

    (2) Those that use direct antigen techniques to detect an organism and may also interpret Gram stains or perform primary inoculation, or perform any combination of these;

    (3) Those that, in addition to interpreting Gram stains, performing primary inoculations, and using direct antigen tests, also isolate and identify aerobic bacteria from throat, urine, cervical, or urethral discharge specimens to the genus level and may also perform antimicrobial susceptibility tests on selected isolated microorganisms;

    (4) Those that perform the services in paragraph (a)(3) of this section and also isolate and identify aerobic bacteria from any source to the species level and may also perform antimicrobial susceptibility tests; and

    (5) Those that perform the services in paragraph (a)(4) of this section and also isolate and identify anaerobic bacteria from any source.

    (b)

    Program content and frequency of challenge. To be approved for proficiency testing for bacteriology, the annual program must provide a minimum of five samples per testing event. There must be at least three testing events provided to the laboratory at approximately equal intervals per year. The samples may be provided to the laboratory through mailed shipments

    or, at HHS' option, may be provided to HHS or its designee for on-site testing

    .

    For the types of laboratories specified in paragraph (a) of this section, an annual program must include samples that contain organisms that are representative of the six major groups of bacteria: anaerobes, Enterobacteriaceae, gram-positive bacilli, gram-positive cocci, gram-negative cocci, and miscellaneous gram-negative bacteria, as appropriate.

    The specific organisms included in the samples may vary from year to year.

    (1) The annual program must include, as applicable, samples for:

    (i) Gram stain including bacterial morphology;

    (ii) Direct bacterial antigen detection

    , bacterial isolation and identification, Gram stain, and antimicrobial susceptibility testing.(1

    ;

    (iii) Bacterial toxin detection; and,

    (iv) Detection and identification of bacteria which includes one of the following:

    (A) Detection of the presence or absence of bacteria without identification; or

    (B) Identification of bacteria; and

    (v) Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of select bacteria.

    (2) An approved program must furnish HHS and its agents with a description of samples that it plans to include in its annual program no later than

    six

    6 months before each calendar year.

    At least 50

    The program must include bacteria commonly occurring in patient specimens and other important emerging pathogens. The program determines the reportable isolates and correct responses for antimicrobial susceptibility testing for any designated isolate. At least 25 percent of the samples must be mixtures of the principal organism and appropriate normal flora.

    The program must include other important emerging pathogens (as determined by HHS) and either organisms commonly occurring in patient specimens or opportunistic pathogens.

    Mixed cultures are samples that require reporting of one or more principal pathogens. Mixed cultures are not “negative” samples such as when two commensal organisms are provided in a PT sample with the intended response of “negative” or “no pathogen present.” The program must include the following two types of samples

    ; each type of sample must

    to meet the

    50

    25 percent mixed culture criterion:

    (i) Samples that require laboratories to report only organisms that the testing laboratory considers to be a principal pathogen that is clearly responsible for a described illness (excluding immuno-compromised patients). The program determines the reportable isolates, including antimicrobial susceptibility for any designated isolate; and

    (ii) Samples that require laboratories to report all organisms present. Samples must contain multiple organisms frequently found in specimens

    such as urine, blood, abscesses, and aspirates

    where multiple isolates are clearly significant or where specimens are derived from immuno-compromised patients. The program determines the reportable isolates.

    (

    2) An

    3) The content of an approved program

    may

    must vary over time

    . For example, the types of organisms that might be included in an approved program over time are—

    Anaerobes:

    Bacteroides fragilis group

    Clostridium perfringens

    Peptostreptococcus anaerobius

    Enterobacteriaceae

    Citrobacter freundii

    Enterobacter aerogenes

    Escherichia coli

    Klebsiella pneumoniae

    Proteus mirabilis

    Salmonella typhimurium

    Serratia marcescens

    Shigella sonnei

    Yersinia enterocolitica

    Gram-positive bacilli:

    Listeria monocytogenes

    Corynebacterium species CDC Group JK

    Gram-positive cocci:

    Staphylococcus aureus

    Streptococcus Group A

    Streptococcus Group B

    Streptococcus Group D (S. bovis and enterococcus)

    Streptococcus pneumoniae

    Gram-negative cocci:

    Branhamella catarrhalis

    Neisseria gonorrhoeae

    Neisseria meningitidis

    Miscellaneous Gram-negative bacteria:

    Campylobacter jejuni

    Haemophilis influenza, Type B

    Pseudomonas aeruginosa

    (3

    , as appropriate. The types of bacteria included annually must be representative of the following major groups of medically important aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, if appropriate for the sample sources:

    (i) Gram-negative bacilli.

    (ii) Gram-positive bacilli.

    (iii) Gram-negative cocci.

    (iv) Gram-positive cocci.

    (4) For antimicrobial susceptibility testing, the program must provide at least

    one sample

    two samples per testing event

    that includes gram-positive or gram-negative strains

    . The program must annually provide samples that include Gram-positive organisms and samples that include Gram-negative organisms that have a predetermined pattern of

    sensitivity

    susceptibility or resistance to the common antimicrobial agents.

    (

    c

    b) Evaluation of a laboratory's performance. HHS approves only those programs that assess the accuracy of a laboratory's responses in accordance with paragraphs (

    c

    b)(1) through (

    7

    9) of this section.

    (1) The program determines the reportable bacterial staining and morphological characteristics to be interpreted by Gram stain. The program determines the

    reportable

    bacteria to be

    detected

    reported by direct

    antigen techniques or isolation

    bacterial antigen detection, bacterial toxin detection, detection of the presence or absence of bacteria without identification, identification of bacteria, and antimicrobial susceptibility testing. To determine the accuracy of

    a

    each of the laboratory's

    response for Gram stain interpretation, direct antigen detection, identification, or antimicrobial susceptibility testing,

    responses, the program must compare

    the laboratory's response for each sample

    each response with the response which reflects agreement of either 80 percent or more of

    ten

    10 or more referee laboratories or 80 percent or more of all participating laboratories.

    (2) To evaluate a laboratory's response for a particular sample, the program must determine a laboratory's type of service in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section. A laboratory must isolate and

    Both methods must be attempted before the program can choose to not grade a PT sample.

    (2) A laboratory must identify the organisms to

    the same extent it performs these procedures

    highest level that the laboratory reports results on patient specimens.

    (3) A laboratory's performance will be evaluated on the basis of

    its final answer, for example, a laboratory specified in paragraph (a)(3) of this section will be evaluated on

    the

    basis of the

    average of its scores for

    paragraphs c3

    4) through (

    c)(6)

    8) of this section as determined in paragraph (

    c7

    9) of this section.

    (

    3) Since laboratories may incorrectly report the presence of organisms in addition to the correctly identified principal organism(s), the grading system must provide a means of deducting credit for additional erroneous organisms that are reported. Therefore, the

    4) The performance criteria for Gram stain including bacterial morphology is staining reaction, that is, Gram positive or Gram negative and morphological description for each sample. The score is the number of correct responses for Gram stain reaction plus the number of correct responses for morphological description divided by 2 then divided by the number of samples to be tested, multiplied by 100.

    (5) The performance criterion for direct bacterial antigen detection is the presence or absence of the bacterial antigen. The score is the number of correct responses divided by the number of samples to be tested, multiplied by 100.

    (6) The performance criterion for bacterial toxin detection is the presence or absence of the bacterial toxin. The score is the number of correct responses divided by the number of samples to be tested multiplied by 100.

    (7) The performance criterion for the detection and identification of bacteria includes one of the following:

    (i) The performance criterion for the detection of the presence or absence of bacteria without identification is the correct detection of the presence or absence of bacteria without identification. The score is the number of correct responses divided by the number of samples to be tested multiplied by 100.

    (ii) The performance criterion for the identification of bacteria is the total number of correct responses for

    organism isolation and

    bacterial identification submitted by the laboratory divided by the number of organisms present plus the number of incorrect organisms reported by the laboratory

    must be

    multiplied by 100 to establish a score for each sample in each testing event. Since laboratories may incorrectly report the presence of organisms in addition to the correctly identified principal organism(s), the scoring system must provide a means of deducting credit for additional erroneous organisms that are reported. For example, if a sample contained one principal organism and the laboratory reported it correctly but reported the presence of an additional organism, which was not considered reportable, the sample grade would be 1/(1+1) × 100 = 50 percent.

    (

    4

    8) For antimicrobial susceptibility testing, a laboratory must indicate which drugs are routinely included in its test panel when testing patient samples. A laboratory's performance will be evaluated for only those

    antibiotics

    antimicrobials for which

    service is offered

    susceptibility testing is routinely performed on patient specimens. A correct response for each

    antibiotic

    antimicrobial will be determined as described in

    § 493.911(c using criteria such as the guidelines established by the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards. Grading

    of this section. Scoring for each sample is based on the number of correct susceptibility responses reported by the laboratory divided by the actual number of correct susceptibility responses determined by the program, multiplied by 100. For example, if a laboratory offers susceptibility testing

    for Enterobacteriaceae

    using

    amikacin

    three antimicrobial agents,

    cephalothin,

    and

    tobramycin, and

    the

    organism in the proficiency testing sample is an Enterobacteriaceae, and the

    laboratory reports correct responses for two of the three antimicrobial agents, the laboratory's grade would be 2

    /

    3 × 100 = 67 percent.

    (

    5

    9) The

    performance criterion for qualitative antigen tests is the presence or absence of the bacterial antigen. The

    score for

    antigen tests is the number of correct responses divided by the number of samples to be tested for the antigen, multiplied by 100.

    (6) The performance criteria for Gram stain is staining reaction, i.e., gram positive or gram negative. The score for Gram stain is the number of correct responses divided by the number of challenges to be tested, multiplied by 100.

    (7) The score for

    a testing event in bacteriology is the average of the scores determined under paragraphs (

    c3

    4) through (

    c(6)

    of this section

    kbased

    based on the type of service offered by the laboratory.

    [57 87 FR 7151, Feb. 28, 1992, as amended at 58 FR 5228, Jan. 19, 1993; 68 FR 3702, Jan. 24, 200341233, July 11, 2022]