Literature DB >> 16080079

Time to positivity in Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia: possible correlation with the source and outcome of infection.

Riad Khatib1, Kathleen Riederer, Sajjad Saeed, Leonard B Johnson, Mohamad G Fakih, Mamta Sharma, M Shamse Tabriz, Amir Khosrovaneh.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia often persists and causes metastatic infections. It is unknown whether the time between blood culture incubation and growth detection (i.e., the time to positivity) in a continuously monitored system--a probable surrogate marker of bacteremia severity--correlates with outcome.
METHODS: We performed a prospective, observational study involving adult inpatients who had S. aureus bacteremia between 1 January 2002 and 30 June 2003 at a 600-bed teaching hospital. Measurements included time to positivity in initial blood culture series, duration of bacteremia, rate of metastatic infection, and outcome.
RESULTS: A total of 376 S. aureus bacteremias (> or = 1 positive blood culture result) were reported for 357 patients aged 18-103 years (median age, 59 years); 64 bacteremias were excluded because blood was drawn after antibiotic therapy was started (n = 59) or through an intravascular catheter (n = 5). The source of infection was identified in 244 series (78.2%). Metastatic infection was detected in 25 bacteremias (8.0%). The mortality rate was 25.6%. The duration of bacteremia (determined in 251 series) was 1-59 days (median duration, 1 day; 70th percentile, 3 days). The time to positivity ranged from 4.2 to 98.2 h (median time to positivity, 15.5 h) and was significantly shorter for patients with an endovascular source of infection (14.9+/-5.4 vs. 19.5+/-10.6 h; P < .0005), extended duration (i.e., > or = 3 days) of bacteremia (14.1+/-4.2 vs. 18.6+/-9.2 h; P < .0005), and metastatic infection (12.9+/-5.9 vs 18.0+/-9.3 h; P = .007). Analysis of a range of cutoff values demonstrated that a time to positivity of < or = 14 h yielded the best sensitivity and specificity for predicting the source and outcome of infection. Logistic regression analyses revealed that a time to positivity of < or = 14 h was an independent predictor of an endovascular source of infection (P < .0005), extended bacteremia (P < .0005), metastatic infection (P < .0005), and attributable mortality (P = .017).
CONCLUSIONS: Time to positivity in S. aureus bacteremia may provide useful diagnostic and prognostic information. Growth of S. aureus within 14 h after the initiation of incubation may identify patients with a high likelihood of endovascular infection sources, delayed clearance, and complications.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16080079     DOI: 10.1086/432472

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Infect Dis        ISSN: 1058-4838            Impact factor:   9.079


  31 in total

1.  Time to positivity of follow-up blood cultures in patients with persistent Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia.

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5.  Role of SCCmec type in outcome of Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia in a single medical center.

Authors:  Roopa Ganga; Kathleen Riederer; Mamta Sharma; Mohamad G Fakih; Leonard B Johnson; Stephen Shemes; Riad Khatib
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6.  Effect of antifungal therapy timing on mortality in cancer patients with candidemia.

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7.  Predominance of Enterobacteriaceae isolates in early positive anaerobic blood culture bottles in BacT/Alert system.

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8.  Multiplex PCR to diagnose bloodstream infections in patients admitted from the emergency department with sepsis.

Authors:  Ephraim L Tsalik; Daphne Jones; Bradly Nicholson; Lynette Waring; Oliver Liesenfeld; Lawrence P Park; Seth W Glickman; Lauren B Caram; Raymond J Langley; Jennifer C van Velkinburgh; Charles B Cairns; Emanuel P Rivers; Ronny M Otero; Stephen F Kingsmore; Tahaniyat Lalani; Vance G Fowler; Christopher W Woods
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9.  Time to blood culture positivity as a marker for catheter-related candidemia.

Authors:  Ronen Ben-Ami; Miriam Weinberger; Ruth Orni-Wasserlauff; David Schwartz; Avraham Itzhaki; Tzipora Lazarovitch; Edna Bash; Yuval Aharoni; Irina Moroz; Michael Giladi
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2008-05-14       Impact factor: 5.948

10.  Clinical and microbiological implications of time-to-positivity of blood cultures in patients with Gram-negative bacilli bacteremia.

Authors:  H R Palmer; E L Palavecino; J W Johnson; C A Ohl; J C Williamson
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2013-02-09       Impact factor: 3.267

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