Aim: Continuous monitoring of blood culture (BC) systems allows rapid detection of microbial growth. We aimed to determine differences in time to positivity (TTP) in BACTEC BC between organisms and whether a 36-h period was sufficient to detect all relevant pathogenic bacteria for children admitted to a tertiary care paediatric hospital.
Methods: This was a retrospective audit of positive aerobic (AE) and anaerobic (AN) BC from paediatric inpatients with available TTP from 1 August 2016 to 2 January 2019. First positive BC per bacteraemia episode was analysed.
Results: Overall, 649 BC were positive, of which 480 first positive BC were analysed: 246 AE (51.3%) only, 216 paired (45%) (108 AE and 108 AN) and 18 AN (3.8%) only. There were 372 episodes of bacteraemia in 340 patients. Median age was 19 months (interquartile range (IQR): 1.25-60). Median TTP for AE and AN cultures was 13.20 (IQR: 9.84-18.48) and 13.92 h (IQR: 10.32-17.04), respectively. Organisms were GNR 49.7%, GPC 29.6%, contaminants 14.5%, mixed 3.0%, other 2.4% and yeast 0.8%. Streptococcus agalactiae had the fastest median TTP in AE and AN cultures, followed by Escherichia coli (AE 8.88 vs. 10.20 h). For paired AE and AN cultures, TTP was faster for AE versus AN cultures (13.36 vs. 14.52 h, P = 0.001). A 36-h cut-off time captured 97.7% AE BC and 99.1% AN BC with pathogens, and 86.5% AE BC and 91.7% AN BC with contaminants, respectively.
Conclusions: GNR were the commonest pathogens in paediatric BC and faster growth was detected in AE versus AN cultures. By 36 h, >97.7% of BC were positive for pathogens versus 86.5% for contaminants.
Keywords: blood culture; paediatric infectious diseases; time to positivity.
© 2024 Paediatrics and Child Health Division (The Royal Australasian College of Physicians).