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Evaluation of blood culture epidemiology and efficiency in a large European teaching hospital

Authors :
R S Nannan Panday
Nadia Alam
Prabath W. B. Nanayakkara
P. M. van de Ven
S. Wang
T. A. M. Hekker
Internal medicine
Radiology and nuclear medicine
Epidemiology and Data Science
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
AII - Inflammatory diseases
APH - Methodology
CCA - Cancer Treatment and quality of life
CCA - Imaging and biomarkers
Medical Microbiology and Infection Prevention
AII - Infectious diseases
ACS - Diabetes & metabolism
APH - Quality of Care
Source :
Nannan Panday, R S, Wang, S, van de Ven, P M, Hekker, T A M, Alam, N & Nanayakkara, P W B 2019, ' Evaluation of blood culture epidemiology and efficiency in a large European teaching hospital ', PLoS ONE, vol. 14, no. 3, e0214052 . https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214052, PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 3, p e0214052 (2019), PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, 14(3). Public Library of Science, PLoS ONE, 14(3):e0214052. Public Library of Science
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Blood cultures remain the gold standard for detecting bacteremia despite their limitations. The current practice of blood culture collection is still inefficient with low yields. Limited focus has been given to the association between timing of specimen collection at different time points during admission and their yield.METHODS: We carried out a retrospective observational study by analyzing all 3,890 sets of cultures collected from the 1,962 admitted patients over the seven-month period of this study. We compared the blood culture yield between the early group (≤24 hours after admission) and the late group (> 24 hours of admission). We also investigated the effect of prehospital oral antibiotics and pre-analytical time on the first cultures in the emergency department. Epidemiology and efficiency of blood cultures were studied for each medical specialty.RESULTS: In total, 3,349(86.1%) blood cultures were negative and 541(13.9%) were positive for one or more microorganisms. After correcting for contamination, the overall yield was 290 (7.5%). The early group (n = 1,490) yielded significantly more true-positive cultures (10.1% versus 5.8%, PCONCLUSION: This study showed that blood cultures are inefficient in detecting bacteremia. Cultures collected during 24 hours after admission yielded more positive results than those collected later. Significant variations in blood culture epidemiology and efficiency per specialty suggest that guidelines should be reevaluated. Future studies should aim at improving blood culture yield, implementing educational programs to reduce contamination and cost-effective application of modern molecular diagnostic technologies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
14
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....be28afa177b337e8d6d1b93fccac7247
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214052