CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID BROTH CULTURE ISOLATES - THEIR SIGNIFICANCE FOR ANTIBIOTIC-TREATMENT

Citation
Cd. Sturgis et al., CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID BROTH CULTURE ISOLATES - THEIR SIGNIFICANCE FOR ANTIBIOTIC-TREATMENT, American journal of clinical pathology, 108(2), 1997, pp. 217-221
Citations number
7
Categorie Soggetti
Pathology
ISSN journal
00029173
Volume
108
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
217 - 221
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9173(1997)108:2<217:CBCI-T>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
Enriched broth medium is routinely used as a supplement for agar plate culture of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). To assess the clinical utility of broth cultures, 151 consecutive CSF bacterial and fungal isolates o btained from 91 patients were retrospectively reviewed for the effect of results on treatment. Treatment decisions associated with individua l CSF specimens for which isolates were recovered from thioglycollate broth only were compared with the treatment decisions associated with CSF specimens for which isolates were recovered by agar plate culture. Treatment was defined as initiation of or change in antimicrobial the rapy based on the reporting of CSF culture isolates. Thirty-six (24%) of the 151 isolates were recovered in broth only. Three (8%) of these 36 isolates (from 34 patients) resulted in treatment with antimicrobia l agents; however, 2 of the 3 treated isolates (Candida tropicalis, Pr oteus mirabilis) were recovered from a second CSF specimen in agar pla te culture within 24 hours. Thus, only a single isolate (3%; Staphyloc occus epidermidis) was treated based solely on a positive broth cultur e result. In contrast, 60 (52%) of the 115 isolates recovered in agar plate culture from 23 (40%) of 57 patients were treated (staphylococci , 28; gram-negative bacilli, 14; Cryptococcus neoformans, 10; Streptoc occus pneumoniae, 3; Streptococcus sanguis, 1; other, 4). We conclude that treatment with antimicrobial agents based on isolates recovered f rom CSF specimens in broth culture alone is infrequent and infer from the data that the use of CSF broth cultures contributes little to trea tment decisions.