R. Lyon et G. Woods, COMPARISON OF THE BACT ALERT AND ISOLATOR BLOOD CULTURE SYSTEMS FOR RECOVERY OF FUNGI/, American journal of clinical pathology, 103(5), 1995, pp. 660-662
The recovery of fungi by the BacT/Alert (Organon Teknika Corporation,
Durham, NC) and Isolator (Wampole Laboratories, Cranbury, NJ) blood cu
lture systems was compared by retrospective review of 2,174 matched cu
ltures from 715 patients collected from April 1, 1993 to February 28,
1994. One hundred five isolates were recovered from 44 patients by one
or both culture systems, All patients were fungemic with one organism
. In all cases of fungemia, collection times for both culture systems
were within 6 hours of each other, Of 22 isolates of Candida spp, the
Isolator recovered all 22 isolates whereas the BacT/Alert recovered 15
(68.2%) (P <.05). The Isolator detected more isolates of Cryptococcus
neoformans (10 of 11) than did the BacT/Alert (7 of 11). All 64 isola
tes of Histoplasma capsulatum (P <.0001) and 6 isolates of Malassezia
furfur, (P <.05) were recovered by the Isolator system only. For 20 is
olates recovered by both systems for which time to recovery could be d
etermined, tile mean time to detection of growth was 2.9 days (range 0
-9 days) for tile Isolator and 2.1 days (range 0-5 days) for the BacT/
Alert. In conclusion, the Isolator blood culture system is superior to
BacT/Alert for tile detection of fungemia, including fungemias caused
by Candida spp, H capsulatum, and M furfur.