Background: Contaminated blood cultures result in unnecessary antibiotic use, increased length of stay, and additional laboratory tests, all of which increase healthcare costs. While the optimal skin antisepsis agent for reducing blood culture contamination is not known, the cost of various agents differs substantially. Objective: To determine the relative rates of blood culture contamination for 3 skin antisepsis interventions - 10% povidone iodine aqueous solution (PI), 2% iodine tincture (IT) and 2% chlorhexidine gluconate in 70% isopropyl alcohol (CHG) - when used by dedicated phlebotomy teams to obtain peripheral blood cultures in adult non-ICU medical and surgical patients.
A group-randomized crossover trial was conducted to test the null hypothesis of no difference in blood culture contamination rates among 3 antiseptic skin preparations. The sequence of 3 different antiseptic treatments was randomly assigned to 3 separate hospital floors, therefore in this trial cross-over occurred at the hospital floor level (not the individual patient level). Also, it is possible for subjects to have multiple blood culture sets obtained during the study. Thus, the number of blood culture sets will not equal the number of unique subjects in the study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
3,879
Iodine tincture (2% iodine and 2% sodium iodide diluted in 50% ethanol) packaged in a single 0.67 mL Sepp applicator (Enturia, Leewood KS)
2% chlorhexidine gluconate/70% isopropyl alcohol packaged in a single 1.5 ml Frepp applicators (Enturia, Leewood KS)
10% povidone iodine aqueous solution packaged in a single 0.67 Sepp applicator (Enturia, Leewood KS)
Blood Culture Contamination
A culture set was considered contaminated if it yielded growth of typical skin contaminants including aerobic gram positive rods, Lactobacillus sp, Propionibacterium acnes, Micrococcus sp, Bacillus sp (not B. anthracis or B. cereus), coag negative Staphylococcus, Neisseria sp (not N. meningitides or N. gonorrhoeae), or gamma-hemolytic streptococci (not Enterococcus sp) from only 1 of 2 or more blood culture sets obtained from different sites.
Time frame: 5 days
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.