TY - JOUR
T1 - Underutilization and Quality Gaps in Blood Culture Processing in Public Hospitals of Peru
AU - Krapp, Fiorella
AU - Rondon, Claudia
AU - Amaro, Catherine
AU - Barco-Yaipén, Evelyn
AU - Valera-Krumdieck, María
AU - Vásquez, Rubén
AU - Briones, Alexander
AU - Casapia, Martin
AU - Burgos, Antonio
AU - López, Favio Sarmiento
AU - Vilcapoma, Pierina
AU - Sipión, Roberto Díaz
AU - Villegas-Chiroque, Miguel
AU - Castillo, Kelly
AU - Pino-Dueñas, Jimena
AU - Cuadros, Edwin Cuaresma
AU - Alpaca-Salvador, Hugo
AU - Campana, René
AU - Córdova, Teresa Peralta
AU - Chavez, Elizett Sierra
AU - Ventura, Carla Aguado
AU - Peeters, Marjan
AU - Jacobs, Jan
AU - Garcia, Coralith
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.
PY - 2022/2
Y1 - 2022/2
N2 - Correct processing of blood cultures may impact individual patient management, antibiotic stewardship, and scaling up of antimicrobial resistance surveillance. To assess the quality of blood culture processing, we conducted four assessments at 16 public hospitals across different regions of Peru. We assessed the following standardized quality indicators: 1) positivity and contamination rates, 2) compliance with recommended number of bottles/sets and volume of blood sampled, 3) blood culture utilization, and 4) possible barriers for compliance with recommendations. Suboptimal performance was found, with a median contamination rate of 4.2% (range 0-15.1%), with only one third of the participating hospitals meeting the target value of , 3%; and a median positivity rate of 4.9% (range 1-8.1%), with only 6 out of the 15 surveilled hospitals meeting the target of 6-12%. None of the assessed hospitals met both targets. The median frequency of solitary blood cultures was 71.9%and only 8.9%(N 5 59) of the surveyed adult bottles met the target blood volume of 8 - 12 mL, whereas 90.5% (N 5 602) were underfilled. A high frequency of missed opportunities for ordering blood cultures was found (69.9%, 221/316) among patients with clinical indications for blood culture sampling. This multicenter study demonstrates important shortcomings in the quality of blood culture processing in public hospitals of Peru. It provides a national benchmark of blood culture utilization and quality indicators that can be used to monitor future quality improvement studies and diagnostic stewardship policies.
AB - Correct processing of blood cultures may impact individual patient management, antibiotic stewardship, and scaling up of antimicrobial resistance surveillance. To assess the quality of blood culture processing, we conducted four assessments at 16 public hospitals across different regions of Peru. We assessed the following standardized quality indicators: 1) positivity and contamination rates, 2) compliance with recommended number of bottles/sets and volume of blood sampled, 3) blood culture utilization, and 4) possible barriers for compliance with recommendations. Suboptimal performance was found, with a median contamination rate of 4.2% (range 0-15.1%), with only one third of the participating hospitals meeting the target value of , 3%; and a median positivity rate of 4.9% (range 1-8.1%), with only 6 out of the 15 surveilled hospitals meeting the target of 6-12%. None of the assessed hospitals met both targets. The median frequency of solitary blood cultures was 71.9%and only 8.9%(N 5 59) of the surveyed adult bottles met the target blood volume of 8 - 12 mL, whereas 90.5% (N 5 602) were underfilled. A high frequency of missed opportunities for ordering blood cultures was found (69.9%, 221/316) among patients with clinical indications for blood culture sampling. This multicenter study demonstrates important shortcomings in the quality of blood culture processing in public hospitals of Peru. It provides a national benchmark of blood culture utilization and quality indicators that can be used to monitor future quality improvement studies and diagnostic stewardship policies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85125012518&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4269/ajtmh.21-0770
DO - 10.4269/ajtmh.21-0770
M3 - Article
C2 - 34872054
AN - SCOPUS:85125012518
SN - 0002-9637
VL - 106
SP - 432
EP - 440
JO - American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
JF - American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
IS - 2
ER -