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661. Futility of Bacterial Bone Marrow Cultures: Experience over a 19 Year Period
BACKGROUND: Bone marrow biopsies are often performed on patients with unclear diagnoses and cultures may be ordered for both routine bacterial, mycobacterial and fungal pathogens. They are performed in semi-sterile conditions and involve needle penetration through the skin, posing an increased risk...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7777974/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.854 |
Sumario: | BACKGROUND: Bone marrow biopsies are often performed on patients with unclear diagnoses and cultures may be ordered for both routine bacterial, mycobacterial and fungal pathogens. They are performed in semi-sterile conditions and involve needle penetration through the skin, posing an increased risk of skin contamination. These cultures also require a substantial amount of laboratory personnel time. METHODS: Cultures collected from 2001-2020 were surveyed in the lab electronic record. We assessed the culture type (fungal, bacterial, mycobacterial), and the presence of pathogens and contaminants. An organism was deemed a contaminant if it was consistent with skin flora or listed as a contaminant in the report given to the physician. Organisms for which the role in bone marrow disease is unclear were included as possible pathogens. For questionable non-contaminant organisms, clinical significance was determined based on if patient was treated for the organism. For all bone marrow cultures, growth of the same organism within 1 month of the bone marrow specimen was surveyed to determine whether the organism would have been found by alternative methods. RESULTS: Of 483 bacterial bone marrow cultures, there were 110 (23%) positives, of which 76 (69%) were deemed contaminants. Twenty (18%) of the 76 contaminants grew in the routine bacterial culture. However, 49 (65%) contaminants grew in the AFB culture, of which 10 also grew in the bacterial culture. For the 34 non-contaminant organisms, 26 were determined to be clinically significant. Nineteen of the 26 had a matching culture (usually blood) growing the organism within 1 month. The majority of pathogens were mycobacteria (18 of the 34). Fungal organisms represented 5 cultures and 11 were bacterial. Of the 11 bacterial organisms, 1 was a Helicobacter species (grown in special media), and 4 had a matching positive blood culture. Only 4 (1% of 483) bacterial non-contaminants grew in the routine bacterial culture. Given an unknown number of true negatives, we can only conclude a positive predictive value (PPV) of 0.16 for routine bacterial cultures. Including AFB and fungal cultures, the PPV increased to 0.30. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate that routine bacterial bone marrow culture is unlikely to yield a novel result and is likely a poor use of lab resources. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures |
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