Ghneim Mira H, Schrank Gregory M, Teeter William, Andersen Brooke, Brown Anna, Tran Quincy K
Department of Surgery, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA.
Program in Trauma, The R Adam Cowley Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA.
Bioengineering (Basel). 2025 Jun 3;12(6):609. doi: 10.3390/bioengineering12060609.
Patients with soft tissue infection are often encountered in clinical practice. The mainstay of treatment typically includes antimicrobial therapy, followed by surgical debridement when indicated. Blood cultures are often performed prior to starting the first dose of antibiotics. However, when patients require transfer to tertiary/quaternary-level care for more advanced surgical interventions, blood cultures are often repeated despite patients being on broad-spectrum antibiotics. Our study aims to investigate the utility of blood cultures following transfer to a higher level of care. This is a retrospective study involving adult patients (≥18 years of age) who were transferred to a quaternary academic center with soft tissue infections between 15 June 2018 and 15 February 2022. Patients with incomplete medical records and/or without blood culture data after arrival were excluded. The primary outcome was the rate of positive blood cultures post-transfer. Descriptive analyses were performed, and comparisons between groups were expressed as absolute differences and 95% CI. We analyzed 303 patients with a mean (+/-SD) age of 54 (14) years, and 199 (66%) were male. Necrotizing soft tissue infections (NSTIs) predominated, 198 patients (65%), with a majority of the NSTIs involving the perineum (112, 37%). The prevalence of positive blood cultures was 20 (7%) for pre-transfer and 14 (5%) for post-transfer. Among post-transfer positive blood cultures, 3 (21%) were coagulase-negative with 2 (14%) cases each for the blood culture categories of polymicrobial, methicillin-sensitive , and , and 2 (14%) with . Among 112 patients with NSTIs of the perineum, 2 (14%) patients had positive blood cultures post-transfer, compared with 110 (38%) patients with negative blood cultures (difference 24%, 95% CI -0.40, -0.12, < 0.001). For patients with soft tissue infection, the prevalence of positive blood culture after arrival at our quaternary care center was low at 5%. Pathogenic cases of positive blood cultures after transfer were polymicrobial, methicillin-sensitive and species. However, the low number of post-transfer positive blood cultures limits the strength of the inference and should be interpreted cautiously. Further studies are necessary to confirm our observation. Clinicians at tertiary/quaternary care centers should consider the utility of obtaining blood cultures from patients with soft tissue infections transferred from other facilities.
软组织感染患者在临床实践中较为常见。治疗的主要手段通常包括抗菌治疗,必要时进行外科清创。在开始首剂抗生素治疗前,通常会进行血培养。然而,当患者需要转至三级/四级医疗机构接受更高级的外科干预时,尽管患者已使用广谱抗生素,仍常常重复进行血培养。我们的研究旨在调查转至更高水平医疗机构后血培养的效用。这是一项回顾性研究,纳入了2018年6月15日至2022年2月15日期间因软组织感染转至四级学术中心的成年患者(≥18岁)。排除病历不完整和/或到达后无血培养数据的患者。主要结局是转院后血培养阳性率。进行了描述性分析,组间比较以绝对差值和95%置信区间表示。我们分析了303例患者,平均(±标准差)年龄为54(14)岁,其中199例(66%)为男性。坏死性软组织感染(NSTIs)占主导,共198例患者(65%),大多数NSTIs累及会阴部(112例,37%)。转院前血培养阳性率为20例(7%),转院后为14例(5%)。在转院后血培养阳性的病例中,凝固酶阴性3例(21%),多微生物、甲氧西林敏感菌及其他血培养类别各2例(14%)。在112例会阴部NSTIs患者中,转院后2例(14%)血培养阳性,而血培养阴性的患者有110例(38%)(差值24%;95%置信区间 -0.40,-0.12;P<0.001)。对于软组织感染患者,到达我们的四级医疗机构后血培养阳性率较低,为5%。转院后血培养阳性的致病病例为多微生物、甲氧西林敏感菌及其他菌种。然而,转院后血培养阳性病例数量较少,限制了推断的力度,应谨慎解读。需要进一步研究来证实我们的观察结果。三级/四级医疗机构的临床医生应考虑对从其他机构转来的软组织感染患者进行血培养的效用。