Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • bacteremia (4)
  • blood (12)
  • care protocol (1)
  • cases (1)
  • child (1)
  • child preschool (1)
  • children (1)
  • concept (2)
  • culture (7)
  • diagnosis (2)
  • female (1)
  • fever (2)
  • humans (1)
  • neutropenia (9)
  • patients (4)
  • periods (3)
  • protocol (1)
  • weight (4)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Poor and delayed microbiological documentation of episodes of febrile neutropenia (EFN) deserves improvement. We assessed the impact of a new blood culture (BC) sampling protocol to optimize the diagnosis of bloodstream infection during EFN, compared with standard of care protocol. This pre/post intervention included patients who presented an EFN in a pediatric hematology-oncology center. Data were compared between 1-year periods P1 (110 EFN, 53 patients) and P2 (124 EFN, 53 patients). Pre-intervention settings were 1-2 mL of blood cultured per BC set and several samplings over days (multisampling strategy) during period P1 vs. one unique early sampling of a large volume of blood (0.5-60 mL) depending on patient weight during period P2 (single-sampling weight-adapted strategy). Microbial detection and time-to-diagnosis were evaluated. Seventeen EFNs were microbiologically documented in P1 (15.5%) and 26 in P2 (21%). The rate of positive BC sets increased during P2 (10.4% vs. 5.8%). All cases of bacteremia were documented by BC drawn during the first 4 days of fever, and during P2 by samples obtained on the first day of fever. Bacteremia detection was improved. This proof-of-concept study shows benefits of combining the single-sampling strategy with large weight-adapted blood sampling strategy during EFN. Combination of single-sampling and weight-adapted blood culture strategies showed benefits in the documentation of bloodstream infections during febrile neutropenia. Bacteremia detection was improved in this preliminary study and this warrants further evaluation in the overall pediatric population. We observed no adverse effects associated with the new strategy while overall blood sparing was improved and handling of intravascular devices was reduced. The good tolerance of the blood sampling suggests that the recommended 1% volume limitation in children could be reconsidered. A similar evaluation is justified in the overall pediatric population suspected for bloodstream infection.

    Citation

    Brigitte Lamy, Sarah Dutron, Stéphanie Haouy, Laure Saumet, Hélène Marchandin, Nicolas Sirvent. Optimized blood culture strategy to document febrile neutropenia. Pediatric research. 2021 Apr;89(5):1109-1116

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 32722662

    View Full Text