How to handle ct‐guided abscess drainages in microbiological analyses? Sterile vials vs. blood culture bottles for transport and processing

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Abstract

The aim of this investigation was to compare microbiological analyses of 100 computed tomography‐guided drainages from infectious foci (thoracic, abdominal, musculoskeletal), trans-ported and analyzed by two widely established techniques, that are (i) sterile vials or (ii) inoculated blood culture bottles. The mean number of detected microorganisms from blood culture (aero-bic/anaerobic) or conventional method (sterile vial, solid and broth media) per specimen were com-parable with 1.29 and 1.41, respectively (p = 1.0). The conventional method showed a trend towards shorter time‐to‐result (median 28.62 h) in comparison to blood culture incubation (median 43.55 h) (p = 0.0722). Of note, detection of anaerobes (13% vs. 36%) and the number of detected microorganisms in polymicrobial infections (2.76 vs. 3.26) differed significantly with an advantage towards conventional techniques (p = 0.0015; p = 0.035), especially in abdominal aspirations. Despite substan-tially overlapping results from both techniques, the conventional approach includes some benefits which justify its role as standard approach.

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Skusa, R., Skusa, C., Wohlfarth, M., Hahn, A., Frickmann, H., Weber, M. A., … Warnke, P. (2021). How to handle ct‐guided abscess drainages in microbiological analyses? Sterile vials vs. blood culture bottles for transport and processing. Microorganisms, 9(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9071510

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