Recent studies indicate that discrete inner colonies (ICs) arise during fosfomycin disk diffusion (DD) testing. CLSI and EUCAST have contradicting recommendations on the interpretation of ICs; CLSI recommends considering them while EUCAST recommends ignoring them when interpreting DD results. We sought to compare the categorical agreement of DD and agar dilution (AD) MIC and to assess the implications of ICs interpretation on zone diameter readings. A convenience sample of 80 Klebsiella pneumoniae clinical isolates with varied phenotypic profiles collected from 3 United States locations was included. Susceptibility was determined in duplicate, using both organization recommendations and interpretations for Enterobacterales. Correlations between methods were calculated using EUCASTIV AD as the reference method. MIC values ranged from 1 to >256 μg/mL with an MIC50/90 of 32/256 μg/mL. Extrapolating EUCASToral and CLSI AD Escherichia coli breakpoints, 12.5% and 83.8% of isolates were susceptible, respectively, whereas 66.3% were susceptible by EUCASTIV AD-which applies to K. pneumoniae. CLSI DD measurements were 2 to 13 mm smaller than EUCAST measurements due to 66 (82.5%) isolates producing discrete ICs. Categorical agreement with EUCASTIV AD was greatest for CLSI AD (65.0%) and poorest for EUCASToral DD (6.3%). Isolates among this collection were frequently classified into different interpretive categories based on varying breakpoint organization recommendations. The more conservative oral breakpoints of EUCAST resulted in more isolates categorized as resistant despite frequent ICs. Differing zone diameter distributions and poor categorical agreement highlight issues of extrapolating E. coli breakpoints and methods to other Enterobacterales, and the clinical relevance of this issue warrants further investigation. IMPORTANCE Fosfomycin susceptibility testing recommendations are complex. Both the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute and the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) recognize agar dilution as the reference method, but they also support disk diffusion as an approved method for Escherichia coli. However, these two organizations have conflicting recommendations for the interpretation of inner colonies that arise during disk diffusion testing which can lead to varying zone diameters and interpretations despite isolates having identical MIC values. Using a collection of 80 Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates, we found that a large (82.5%) portion produced discrete inner colonies during disk diffusion and isolates were frequently classified into different interpretive categories. The more conservative breakpoints of EUCAST resulted in more isolates categorized as resistant despite frequent inner colonies. Differing zone diameter distributions and poor categorical agreement highlight issues of extrapolating E. coli breakpoints and methods to other Enterobacterales, and the clinical relevance of this issue warrants further investigation.
Keywords: Klebsiella pneumoniae; agreement; disk diffusion; fosfomycin; inner colonies; interpretation.