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Quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four European countries

INTRODUCTION: Blood culture (BC) testing before initiation of antimicrobial therapy is recommended as a standard of care in international sepsis guidelines and has been shown to reduce intensive care unit (ICU) stay, antibiotic use, and costs in hospitalized patients. Whereas microbiological laborat...

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Autores principales: Schmitz, Roland PH, Keller, Peter M, Baier, Michael, Hagel, Stefan, Pletz, Mathias W, Brunkhorst, Frank M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4056044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24144084
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc13074
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author Schmitz, Roland PH
Keller, Peter M
Baier, Michael
Hagel, Stefan
Pletz, Mathias W
Brunkhorst, Frank M
author_facet Schmitz, Roland PH
Keller, Peter M
Baier, Michael
Hagel, Stefan
Pletz, Mathias W
Brunkhorst, Frank M
author_sort Schmitz, Roland PH
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Blood culture (BC) testing before initiation of antimicrobial therapy is recommended as a standard of care in international sepsis guidelines and has been shown to reduce intensive care unit (ICU) stay, antibiotic use, and costs in hospitalized patients. Whereas microbiological laboratory practice has been highly standardized, shortfalls in the preanalytic procedures in the ICU (that is indication, time-to-incubation, blood volume and numbers of BC sets) have a significant effect on the diagnostic yield. The objective of this study was to gain insights into current practices regarding BC testing in intensive care units. METHODS: Qualitative survey, data collection by 138 semi-structured telephone interviews in four European countries (Italy, UK, France and Germany) between September and November 2009 in 79 clinical microbiology laboratories (LABs) and 59 ICUs. RESULTS: Whereas BC testing is expected to remain the gold standard for sepsis diagnostics in all countries, there are substantial differences regarding preanalytic procedures. The decision to launch BC testing is carried out by physicians vs. ICU nurses in the UK in 92 vs. 8%, in France in 75 vs. 25%, in Italy in 88 vs. 12% and in Germany in 92 vs. 8%. Physicians vs. nurses collect BCs in the UK in 77 vs. 23%, in France in 0 vs. 100%, in Italy in 6 vs. 94% and in Germany in 54 vs. 46%. The mean time from blood collection to incubation in the UK is 2 h, in France 3 h, in Italy 4 h, but 20 h in German remote LABs (2 h in in-house LABs), due to the large number of remote nonresident microbiological laboratories in Germany. There were major differences between the perception of the quality of BC testing between ICUs and LABs. Among German ICU respondents, 62% reported that they have no problems with BC testing, 15% reported time constraints, 15% cost pressure, and only 8% too long time to incubation. However, the corresponding LABs of these German ICUs reported too many false positive results due to preanalytical contaminations (49%), insufficient numbers of incoming BC sets (47%), long transportation time (41%) or cost pressure (18%). CONCLUSIONS: There are considerable differences in the quality of BC testing across European countries. In Germany, time to incubation is a considerable problem due to the increasing number of remote LABs. This is a major issue of concern to physicians aiming to implement sepsis guidelines in the ICUs.
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spelling pubmed-40560442014-06-14 Quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four European countries Schmitz, Roland PH Keller, Peter M Baier, Michael Hagel, Stefan Pletz, Mathias W Brunkhorst, Frank M Crit Care Research INTRODUCTION: Blood culture (BC) testing before initiation of antimicrobial therapy is recommended as a standard of care in international sepsis guidelines and has been shown to reduce intensive care unit (ICU) stay, antibiotic use, and costs in hospitalized patients. Whereas microbiological laboratory practice has been highly standardized, shortfalls in the preanalytic procedures in the ICU (that is indication, time-to-incubation, blood volume and numbers of BC sets) have a significant effect on the diagnostic yield. The objective of this study was to gain insights into current practices regarding BC testing in intensive care units. METHODS: Qualitative survey, data collection by 138 semi-structured telephone interviews in four European countries (Italy, UK, France and Germany) between September and November 2009 in 79 clinical microbiology laboratories (LABs) and 59 ICUs. RESULTS: Whereas BC testing is expected to remain the gold standard for sepsis diagnostics in all countries, there are substantial differences regarding preanalytic procedures. The decision to launch BC testing is carried out by physicians vs. ICU nurses in the UK in 92 vs. 8%, in France in 75 vs. 25%, in Italy in 88 vs. 12% and in Germany in 92 vs. 8%. Physicians vs. nurses collect BCs in the UK in 77 vs. 23%, in France in 0 vs. 100%, in Italy in 6 vs. 94% and in Germany in 54 vs. 46%. The mean time from blood collection to incubation in the UK is 2 h, in France 3 h, in Italy 4 h, but 20 h in German remote LABs (2 h in in-house LABs), due to the large number of remote nonresident microbiological laboratories in Germany. There were major differences between the perception of the quality of BC testing between ICUs and LABs. Among German ICU respondents, 62% reported that they have no problems with BC testing, 15% reported time constraints, 15% cost pressure, and only 8% too long time to incubation. However, the corresponding LABs of these German ICUs reported too many false positive results due to preanalytical contaminations (49%), insufficient numbers of incoming BC sets (47%), long transportation time (41%) or cost pressure (18%). CONCLUSIONS: There are considerable differences in the quality of BC testing across European countries. In Germany, time to incubation is a considerable problem due to the increasing number of remote LABs. This is a major issue of concern to physicians aiming to implement sepsis guidelines in the ICUs. BioMed Central 2013 2013-10-21 /pmc/articles/PMC4056044/ /pubmed/24144084 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc13074 Text en Copyright © 2013 Schmitz et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Schmitz, Roland PH
Keller, Peter M
Baier, Michael
Hagel, Stefan
Pletz, Mathias W
Brunkhorst, Frank M
Quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four European countries
title Quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four European countries
title_full Quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four European countries
title_fullStr Quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four European countries
title_full_unstemmed Quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four European countries
title_short Quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four European countries
title_sort quality of blood culture testing - a survey in intensive care units and microbiological laboratories across four european countries
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4056044/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24144084
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc13074
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