Lab Medicine Significance 7/10

Blood Culture Diagnostic Stewardship: Optimizing When and How to Collect

This review addresses the paradox that most blood cultures in clinical practice yield no growth, suggesting suboptimal patient selection or collection practices. The authors outline how contamination drives unnecessary antibiotic exposure and increased healthcare costs, and call for a diagnostic stewardship framework that defines when blood cultures are appropriate, optimizes collection volumes, and minimizes false positives. The absence of national utilization benchmarks or clear guidelines on low-value blood culture indications represents a significant gap in antimicrobial stewardship infrastructure.

The original study

Blood Culture Utilization in the Hospital Setting: a Call for Diagnostic Stewardship.

Authors
Fabre V, Carroll KC, Cosgrove SE
Journal
Journal of clinical microbiology
Type
Journal Article, Review
PMID
34260274
Read the original study →

Original abstract

There has been significant progress in detection of bloodstream pathogens in recent decades with the development of more sensitive automated blood culture detection systems and the availability of rapid molecular tests for faster organism identification and detection of resistance genes. However, most blood cultures in clinical practice do not grow organisms, suggesting that suboptimal blood culture collection practices (e.g., suboptimal blood volume) or suboptimal selection of patients to culture (i.e., blood cultures ordered for patients with low likelihood of bacteremia) may be occurring. A national blood culture utilization benchmark does not exist, nor do specific guidelines on when blood cultures are appropriate or when blood cultures are of low value and waste resources. Studies evaluating the potential harm associated with excessive blood cultures have focused on blood culture contamination, which has been associated with significant increases in health care costs and negative consequences for patients related to exposure to unnecessary antibiotics and additional testing. Optimizing blood culture performance is important to ensure bloodstream infections (BSIs) are diagnosed while minimizing adverse events from overuse. In this review, we discuss key factors that influence blood culture performance, with a focus on the preanalytical phase, including technical aspects of the blood culture collection process and blood culture indications. We highlight areas for improvement and make recommendations to improve current blood culture practices among hospitalized patients.