| Literature DB >> 30497526 |
J A Hughes1,2, C J Cabilan3, Julian Williams4,5, Mercedes Ray4, Fiona Coyer6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blood cultures are an integral part of the diagnosis of bacteremia in unwell patients. The treatment of bacteremia involves the rapid and accurate identification of the causative agent grown from the blood cultures collected. Contamination of blood cultures with non-pathogenic microbes such as skin commensals causes false positive results and subsequent unnecessary and potentially harmful interventions. While guidelines for blood culture quality recommend no more than 2-3% contamination rate, rates up to 12% are reported in the literature. There have been a number of methods proposed to reduce the contamination of blood cultures, including educational interventions, changing of skin cleansing preparations and introduction of blood culture collection packs in acute care settings. This protocol outlines methods to identify and evaluate interventions to reduce blood culture contamination in the acute care setting.Entities:
Keywords: Acute care; Blood culture; Contamination; Microbial contamination; Peripheral blood collection; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30497526 PMCID: PMC6267024 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-018-0877-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Examples of search strings and results from PubMed and CINAHL via EbscoHost
| Keyword search | Date of search | Search engine used | Number of publications retrieved |
|---|---|---|---|
| ((((contamination[Title/Abstract]) OR false-positive[Title/Abstract])) AND ((((Blood culture[MeSH Major Topic]) OR Hematologic tests[MeSH Major Topic]) OR blood culture*[Title/Abstract]) | November 28, 2017 | PubMed | 1491 |
| (Blood Culture OR Culture) AND (Contamination OR False Positive OR Microbial Contamination OR Bacterial Contamination OR False Negative). | November 29, 2017 | CINAHL via Ebsco | 2119 |
Effective Practice and Organisation of Care group risk of bias criteria for randomised controlled trials, quasi-experimental studies and pretest-posttest designs
| High risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Was the allocation sequence adequately generated? | □ | □ | □ |
| 2. Was the allocation adequately concealed? | □ | □ | □ |
| 3. Were baseline outcome measurements similar? | □ | □ | □ |
| 4. Were baseline characteristics similar? | □ | □ | □ |
| 5. Were incomplete outcome data adequately addressed? | □ | □ | □ |
| 6. Was knowledge of the allocated interventions adequately prevented during the study? | □ | □ | □ |
| 7. Was the study adequately protected against contamination? | □ | □ | □ |
| 8. Was the study free from selective outcome reporting? | □ | □ | □ |
| 9. Was the study free from other risks of bias? | □ | □ | □ |
Effective Practice and Organisation of Care group risk of bias criteria for interrupted time series
| High risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Was the intervention independent of other changes? | □ | □ | □ |
| 2. Was the shape of the intervention effect pre-specified? | □ | □ | □ |
| 3. Was the intervention unlikely to affect data collection? | □ | □ | □ |
| 4. Was knowledge of the allocated interventions adequately prevented during the study? | □ | □ | □ |
| 5. Were incomplete outcome data adequately addressed? | □ | □ | □ |
| 6. Was the study free from selective outcome reporting? | □ | □ | □ |
| 7. Was the study free from other risks of bias? | □ | □ | □ |