AUTHOR=Lau Anna F. , Walchak Robert C. , Miller Heather B. , Slechta E. Susan , Kamboj Kamal , Riebe Katherine , Robertson Amy E. , Gilbreath Jeremy J. , Mitchell Kaitlin F. , Wallace Meghan A. , Bryson Alexandra L. , Balada-Llasat Joan-Miquel , Bulman Amanda , Buchan Blake W. , Burnham Carey-Ann D. , Butler-Wu Susan , Desai Uma , Doern Christopher D. , Hanson Kimberly E. , Henderson Christina M. , Kostrzewa Markus , Ledeboer Nathan A. , Maier Thomas , Pancholi Preeti , Schuetz Audrey N. , Shi Gongyi , Wengenack Nancy L. , Zhang Sean X. , Zelazny Adrian M. , Frank Karen M. TITLE=Multicenter Study Demonstrates Standardization Requirements for Mold Identification by MALDI-TOF MS JOURNAL=Frontiers in Microbiology VOLUME=10 YEAR=2019 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/microbiology/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2019.02098 DOI=10.3389/fmicb.2019.02098 ISSN=1664-302X ABSTRACT=Objectives

Rapid and accurate mold identification is critical for guiding therapy for mold infections. MALDI-TOF MS has been widely adopted for bacterial and yeast identification; however, few clinical laboratories have applied this technology for routine mold identification due to limited database availability and lack of standardized processes. Here, we evaluated the versatility of the NIH Mold Database in a multicenter evaluation.

Methods

The NIH Mold Database was evaluated by eight US academic centers using a solid media extraction method and a challenge set of 80 clinical mold isolates. Multiple instrument parameters important for spectra optimization were evaluated, leading to the development of two specialized acquisition programs (NIH method and the Alternate-B method).

Results

A wide range in performance (33–77%) was initially observed across the eight centers when routine spectral acquisition parameters were applied. Use of the NIH or the Alternate-B specialized acquisition programs, which are different than those used routinely for bacterial and yeast spectral acquisition (MBT_AutoX), in combination with optimized instrument maintenance, improved performance, illustrating that acquisition parameters may be one of the key limiting variable in achieving successful performance.

Conclusion

Successful mold identification using the NIH Database for MALDI-TOF MS on Biotyper systems was demonstrated across multiple institutions for the first time following identification of critical program parameters combined with instrument optimization. This significantly advances our potential to implement MALDI-TOF MS for mold identification across many institutions. Because instrument variability is inevitable, development of an instrument performance standard specific for mold spectral acquisition is suggested to improve reproducibility across instruments.