Economic health care costs of blood culture contamination: A systematic review

Blood culture contamination with gram-positive organisms is a common occurrence in patients suspected of bloodstream infections, especially in emergency departments. Although numerous research studies have investigated the cost implications of blood culture contamination, a contemporary systematic r...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of infection control 2019-08, Vol.47 (8), p.963-967
Hauptverfasser: Dempsey, Casey, Skoglund, Erik, Muldrew, Kenneth L., Garey, Kevin W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Blood culture contamination with gram-positive organisms is a common occurrence in patients suspected of bloodstream infections, especially in emergency departments. Although numerous research studies have investigated the cost implications of blood culture contamination, a contemporary systematic review of the literature has not been performed. The aim of this project was to perform a systematic review of the published literature on the economic costs of blood culture contamination. PubMed was searched (January 1, 1978, to July 15, 2018) using the search terms “blood culture contamination” or “false-positive blood cultures.” Articles were title searched and abstracts were reviewed for eligible articles that reported immediate or downstream economic costs of blood culture contamination. The PubMed search identified 151 relevant articles by title search, with 49 articles included after abstract review. From the studies included, overall blood culture contamination rates ranged from 0.9%-41%. Up to 59% of patients received unnecessary treatment with parenteral vancomycin as a result of blood culture contamination, resulting in increased pharmacy charges between $210 and $12,611 per patient. Increases in total laboratory charges between $2,397 and $11,152 per patient were reported. Attributable hospital length of stay increases due to blood culture contamination ranged from 1-22 days. This systematic review of the literature identified several areas of health care expenditure associated with blood culture contamination. Interventions to reduce the risk of blood culture contamination would avoid downstream economic costs.
ISSN:0196-6553
1527-3296
DOI:10.1016/j.ajic.2018.12.020