Title: Automated Blood Cultures
1Automated Blood Cultures
??? Xiang-Yang Han, MD, PhD Department of
Laboratory Medicine The University of Texas M.
D. Anderson Cancer Center
2Blood Cultures
- Factors affecting bloodstream infections and
culture yield - Parameters
- Significance and interpretation
- Systems and media
- Fastidious organisms
- Trends
3Bloodstream Infection Factors-1
- Bloodstream infection is the most severe form of
infection and carries a high fatality (20 to
50). - Microbial invasion into bloodstream reflects
failure of initial host defense loss of
integrity of skin or mucosa, weakened innate or
acquired immunity, or direct blood inoculation.
4Bloodstream Infection Factors-2
- Microbial factors virulence mechanisms, such as
toxins, intracellular survival, evasion or
shielding from host defenses (leukocytes,
complements, antibodies, etc). - The presence of antimicrobics in the circulation
negatively affect culture positivity.
5Blood Cultures Parameters-1
- Timing
- Blood should be drawn before antibiotic therapy,
if all possible - The presence of bacteria or fungi in the
bloodstream is constant in case of endocarditis - In other cases, microbes in circulation are not
steady, and the best time to draw blood is during
the rise of fever.
6Blood Cultures Parameters-2
- Volume
- 20-40 ml for each set of cultures (one aerobic
bottle and one anaerobic bottle), e.g., - 10 ml blood inoculated into 40 ml broth of BACTEC
bottle to reach 15 ratio - 20 ml blood inoculated into 80 ml broth of ESP
80A bottle (ratio 15). - Pediatric cultures ranging from 1 to 10 ml,
depending on the age.
7Blood Cultures Parameters-3
- Frequency
- For each episode, 2 to 3 sets of culture should
be obtained within first 24 hrs - Data on 282 bacteremic episodes by Weinstein et
al (RID 1983535-53) - First culture detected 257 (91)
- Two cultures together detected 281 (99).
8Blood Cultures Parameters-4
- Incubation atomsphere
- The proportion of anaerobic positive cultures is
decreasing - Thus, routine anaerobic cultures are not required
now - The situation of individual institution and
patient population needs to be considered, such
as surgical and OB/GYN patients.
9Blood Cultures Parameters-5
- How long to incubate?
- Many studies have looked into this issue
- Five days are sufficient to detect nearly all
(99) significant organisms - Longer incubation mostly picks up contaminants
- A culture turned positive 6-7 days later is
unlikely to affect patient care
10Blood Cultures Interpretation
- Almost always significant
- Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli and other
members of Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, Candida spp. - Common contaminant, but individual judgement
needed - Coagulase-neg. staphylococci
- Corneform bacilli
- Alpha-hemolytic streptococci
- Propionibacterium acne
11Blood Cultures Methods
- Manual method (1950s-1970s)
- Incubation for 21 days, visual inspection of
growth of organisms, and blind subcultures - Isolator system (lysis centrifugation method)
- Automated method (1980s)
- Automated detection of microbial CO2 production,
incubation shortened to 7 days, no blind
subcultures - Examples BACTEC 460 and 660, later BACTEC NR660.
- Continuously monitoring blood culturing system
(CMBCS)
12Blood Cultures CMBCS-1
- BioMerieux (Former Organon-Teknika, Durham, NC)
- BacT/Alert series since 1990
- Colorimetric detection for CO2 production
- Every 10 minutes to detect signal and go to
algorithm for analysis to see if significant
growth has occurred - Newer system since 2001 BacT/Alert 3D
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14Blood Cultures CMBCS-2
- Becton-Dickinson (Sparks, MD)
- BACTEC series
- Fluorescent detection of CO2 production
- Every 10 minutes to detect signal
- Newer system BACTEC LX 2004 using laser to
detect CO2 production - Clinical evaluation in progress.
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16Blood Cultures CMBCS-3
- Trek (Former Difco, then ESP, Accumed, Cleveland,
OH) - ESP series
- Manometric detection of CO2 production
- Every 12 minutes detection
- Newer system VersaTrek, 2004
17Blood Cultures CMBCS-4
- Comparison of 3 systems
- They are comparable overall
- BacT/Alert FAN bottle (containing
antimicrobic-removing substance) performs
slightly better than standard bottles and other
systems
18Blood Cultures CMBCS Summary
System Manufacturer CO2 detection method Detection Interval
BacT/Alert BioMerieux Colorimetric 10 minutes
BACTEC series Becton-Dickenson Fluorescence 10 minutes
VersaTrek Trek Diagnostics Manometric 12 minutes
19Quantitative Blood Cultures Lysis
Centrifugation Method
20Blood Cultures Positive Rates
- Overall positive rate 10
- HACEK organisms, 0.01 for all blood cultures or
1 of all blood isolates
21Blood Cultures Common Organisms
- Data from Reimer et al., 1997
- 1975-77 1992-93
- E. coli S. aureus
- S. aureus E. coli
- S. pneumoniae Coag-neg. Staph
- K. pneumoniae K. pneumoniae
- P. aeruginosa Enterococcus spp.
- B. fragilis P. aeruginosa
- Enterococcus spp. S. pneumoniae
- S. pyogenes Viridans streptococci
- C. albicans C. albicans
- P. mirabilis E. cloacae
22Blood Cultures Time of Detection
- Data from BACTEC 9240 (Pat Murray, 1997)
- Streptococcus 10.3 hr
- Enterobacteriaceae 14.0 hr
- Enterococcus 15.1 hr
- Staphylococcus aureus 17.8 hr
- Pseudomonas 18.5 hr
- Coag-neg. Staph 22.9 hr
- Yeast 65.1 hr
23Blood culture for HACEK
- Data from Septi-Chek system (Doern et al., 1996)
- Organism Days 1-5 6-7 gt8 Mean
- Haemophilus aphrophilus 19 4 1 3.3
- A. actinomycetemcomitans 9 1 - 3.7
- Cardiobacterium hominis 16 - - 2.9
- Eikenella corrodens 10 1 - 3.4
- Kingella spp. 3 2 - 3.8
- Brucella spp. 8 1 2 5.6
- Francisella tularensis 5 - - 3.6
- Nutritionally v. strep 121 12 3 4.4
- Total 191 21 6
24Blood culture for Brucella
- Bannatyne et al. JCM 1997 352673-4
- BACTEC 9240 System
- Days No. isolated
- 1-3 48 (49.5)
- 4-5 42 43.4)
- 6-7 4 (4.1)
- 8-9 3 (3.1)
- 10 0
- Total 97 (100)
25Blood Culture Protocol for Endocarditis?
- Not necessary (Baron EJ et al., CID 2005
26Blood Culture Media
- Aerobic media
- Standard aerobic (SA) bottles for BACTEC,
BacT/Alert, and Trek - Anaerobic media
- Standard anaerobic (SN) bottles for BACTEC,
BacT/Alert, and Trek - Mycobacterial media based on Middlebrook 7H9
broth - Additives to remove antimicrobics
- Resins in BACTEC bottles
- FAN in BacT/Alert bottles
27Isolation and Pure Culture
28Gram Stain
29Bacterial Identification Phenotypic Tests
30Antimicrobial Susceptibility Tests
31Bacterial Identification Genotypic Tests
- PCR sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene
- DNA extraction from colony or positive liquid
- PCR amplification
- Sequencing
- Matching with database
- Correlating with culture features
- Report final identification
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