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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, September 1998, p. 2686-2689, Vol. 36, No. 9
University of Massachusetts Medical Center,
Worcester, Massachusetts 01655
Received 15 December 1997/Returned for modification 17 March
1998/Accepted 22 May 1998
During a one-year period, a total of 6,305 blood cultures were
processed in a tertiary-care teaching hospital; 6 to 12 ml of blood was
inoculated into both a BacT/Alert Fan aerobic bottle and an ESP 80A
aerobic bottle. The FAN aerobic bottle contains an
antimicrobial-absorbing material; the 80A aerobic bottle does not.
Bottles were processed on their respective continuous-monitoring blood
culture instruments for up to five days of incubation. Four hundred
thirty-three cultures (6.9%) representing 301 septic episodes in 235 different patients yielded 490 bacteria or yeasts thought to be
clinically significant. Two hundred seventy-five of the 433 presumed
clinically significant positive cultures (63.5%) representing 195 septic episodes and yielding 301 isolates were positive in both FAN and
80A bottles. One hundred nine significant positive cultures (25.2%)
(i.e., cultures positive with an organism judged to be of probable
clinical significance) from 70 septic episodes yielded 126 isolates
only in FAN bottles. Conversely, the 80A bottle was exclusively
positive in 49 instances (11.3%), representing 36 septic episodes and
yielding 63 isolates. The higher rates of significant positive blood
cultures, numbers of septic episodes documented, and numbers of
isolates recovered in FAN bottles versus 80A bottles were all
statistically significant (P < 0.05). Enhanced rates
of detection of presumed clinically significant isolates in FAN bottles
were largely accounted for by Staphylococcus aureus,
members of the Enterobacteriaceae, and non-Pseudomonas aeruginosa miscellaneous gram-negative
bacilli from patients receiving antimicrobial therapy at the time blood cultures were obtained. Enhanced recovery of one organism group, the
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Controlled Comparative Evaluation of BacT/Alert FAN
and ESP 80A Aerobic Media as Means for Detecting Bacteremia
and Fungemia
-hemolytic streptococci, occurred in 80A. With one exception, detection times were essentially equivalent in the two systems. The
single exception pertained to streptococci and enterococci, which were
recovered significantly faster in 80A bottles. Three hundred
thirty-eight of the 6,305 blood cultures evaluated in this study
(5.4%) were judged likely to be contaminated. The percentages of
probable contaminated cultures were as follows: 26.6% FAN and 80A;
42.3% FAN only; 31.1% 80A only (P < 0.05). Finally,
the instrument false-positive rates for the two systems were 0.7% with
FAN and 3.0% with 80A (P < 0.05). We conclude that
while contamination rates were slightly higher with FAN than with 80A,
use of FAN aerobic bottles in conjunction with the BacT/Alert system
will yield significantly higher numbers of clinically significant blood culture isolates than 80A bottles and the ESP system. Furthermore, this
enhanced detection is most conspicuous in patients receiving antimicrobial therapy at the time blood cultures are performed, probably due to the presence of an antimicrobial-absorbing material in
FAN aerobic bottles.
*
Corresponding author. Present address: Department of
Pathology, C606 GH, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242. Phone: (319) 356-8616. Fax: (319) 356-4916.
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