Publications by authors named "Nadia Sant"

Background: Knowledge of time to positivity (TTP) for blood cultures is useful to assess timing of discontinuation of empiric antimicrobials for suspected bacteremia with no focus.

Methods: An audit of positive blood cultures from the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) from November 1, 2019, to October 31, 2020, was performed to determine TTP, defined as the start of incubation to a positive signal from automated incubators.

Results: Three hundred seventy-six positive blood cultures were identified from 248 patients (average age: 6.

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Delayed entry of blood culture bottles is frequent in consolidated laboratories. A retrospective study evaluated time from insertion to detection and total detection time as a function of preincubation time, and we prospectively looked for false negative results. 69,604 blood culture bottles were reviewed for preincubation time, incubation time and total detection time.

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Background: Vancomycin remains widely used for methicillin-resistant (MRSA) infections; however, treatment failure rates up to 50% have been reported. At the authors' institution, monitoring of trough concentration is the standard of care for therapeutic drug monitoring of vancomycin. New guidelines support use of the ratio of 24-hour area under the concentration-time curve to minimum inhibitory concentration (AUC/MIC) as the pharmacodynamic index most likely to predict outcomes in patients with MRSA-associated infections.

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We compared three commercially available group A Streptococcus (GAS) nucleic acid amplification tests, the Quidel Solana GAS assay, the Luminex Aries Group A Strep assay and the Focus Diagnostics Simplexa Group A Strep Direct assay, with GAS bacterial culture. A true positive result was defined as one positive by culture or positive by ≥2/3 molecular methods. Two hundred eighty-seven throat swabs (207 children, 80 adults) were collected.

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Background: Molecular methods enable more rapid and sensitive detection of herpes simplex virus (HSV) than viral culture.

Objective: Three commercial molecular methods, all of which detect both HSV-1 and HSV-2, were compared to viral culture for the detection of HSV from swab specimens.

Study Design: Pediatric and adult patient viral swab specimens were cultured for HSV.

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Objective: Molecular methods to detect diarrheal pathogens are increasingly being used in place of conventional methods. We compared a new multiplex real-time PCR assay for detection of both bacterial and viral gastroenteritis agents, the Allplex™ Gastrointestinal Panel Assays (AGPA), to conventional methods (stool culture for bacterial pathogens and electron microscopy (EM) for viral pathogens).

Results: Gastrointestinal viruses, in particular norovirus genogroup II viruses, were detected by the AGPA in a high number of specimens that were negative by EM.

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Background: CD8 T lymphocytes from chronically infected HIV-positive patients degenerate into a preapoptotic state and exhibit impaired functionality. Particularly in viremic patients, this was associated with an increased proportion of interleukin-7 receptor-alpha low-expressing (IL-7Ralpha(low)) effector-like CD8 T cells. As cytokine signaling through signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT) is essential for cellular function, we hypothesized that activation of this pathway may be impaired in these cells.

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Background: Monocytes/macrophages play a major role in inflammation and pathogen clearance. However, chronic immune activation observed during HIV infection may also cause cellular dysfunction and tissue pathology. Indeed, several defects have been reported in these cells during HIV infections.

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