Environmental monitoring of waterborne Campylobacter: Evaluation of the Australian standard and a hybrid extraction-free MPN-PCR method

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Abstract

Campylobacter is the leading agent of diarrheal disease worldwide. This study evaluates a novel culture-PCR hybrid (MPN-PCR) assay for the rapid enumeration of Campylobacter spp. from estuarine and wastewater systems. To first evaluate the current, culture-based, Australian standard, an inter-laboratory study was conducted on 69 subsampled water samples. The proposed Most-Probable Number (MPN)-PCR method was then evaluated, by analysing 147 estuarine samples collected over a 2 year period. Data for 14 different biological, hydrological and climatic parameters were also collated to identify pathogen-environment relationships and assess the potential for method specific bias. The results demonstrated that the intra-laboratory performance of the MPN-PCR was superior to that of AS/NZS (σ = 0.7912, P < 0.001; κ = 0.701, P < 0.001) with an overall diagnostic accuracy of ~94%. Furthermore, the analysis of both MPN-PCR and AS/NZS identified the potential for the introduction of method specific bias during assessment of the effects of environmental parameters on Campylobacter spp. numbers.

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Henry, R., Schang, C., Chandrasena, G. I., Deletic, A., Edmunds, M., Jovanovic, D., … McCarthy, D. (2015). Environmental monitoring of waterborne Campylobacter: Evaluation of the Australian standard and a hybrid extraction-free MPN-PCR method. Frontiers in Microbiology, 6(FEB). https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2015.00074

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