Earlier positivity of central-venous- versus peripheral-blood cultures is highly predictive of catheter-related sepsis

François Blot, Eric Schmidt, Gérard Nitenberg, Cyrille Tancrède, Bernard Leclercq, Agnès Laplanche, Antoine Andremont

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    Résumé

    To diagnose catheter-related sepsis without removing the catheter, we evaluated the differential positivity times of cultures of blood drawn simultaneously from central venous catheter and peripheral sites. In a 450- bed cancer reference center, simultaneous central- and peripheral-blood cultures were prospectively performed for patients with suspicion of catheter-related sepsis over an 18-month period. Data for 64 patients for whom the same microorganisms were found when central- and peripheral-blood samples were cultured were retrospectively reviewed by two independent physicians blinded to the differential positivity time values in order to establish or refute the diagnosis of catheter-related sepsis. The diagnosis was established in 28 cases, refuted in 14, and indeterminate in the remaining 22. The differential positivity time was significantly greater for patients with catheter-related sepsis (P < 10-4). A cutoff limit of +120 min had 100% specificity and 96.4% sensitivity for the diagnosis of catheter- related sepsis. These results strongly suggest that measurement of the differential positivity time might be a reliable tool facilitating the diagnosis of catheter-related sepsis in patients with an indwelling catheter.

    langue originaleAnglais
    Pages (de - à)105-109
    Nombre de pages5
    journalJournal of Clinical Microbiology
    Volume36
    Numéro de publication1
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 janv. 1998

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