Objective
To determine the impact of a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) enteroviral polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test performance on hospital length of stay (LOS) in a large multicenter cohort of infants undergoing evaluation for central nervous system infection.
Study design
We performed a planned secondary analysis of a retrospective cohort of hospitalized infants ≤60 days of age who had a CSF culture obtained at one of 18 participating centers (2005–2013). After adjustment for patient age and study year as well as clustering by hospital center, we compared LOS for infants who had an EV PCR test performed vs. not performed and among those tested, for infants with a positive vs negative test result.
Results
Of 19,953 hospitalized infants, 4,444 (22.3%) had an EV PCR test performed and 945 (21.3% of tested infants) had positive test results. Hospital LOS was similar for infants who had an EV PCR test performed compared with infants who did not (Incident rate ratio [IRR] 0.98 hours; 95% CI: 0.89–1.06 hours). However, EV PCR-positive infants had a 38% shorter LOS than EV PCR-negative infants (IRR 0.62 hours; 95% CI: 0.57–0.68). No infant with a positive EV PCR test had bacterial meningitis (0%; 95% CI: 0–0.4%).
Conclusions
While EV PCR testing was not associated with a reduction in LOS, infants with a positive EV PCR test had a one-third shorter LOS compared with infants with a negative EV PCR test. Focused EV PCR test use could increase the impact on LOS for infants undergoing CSF evaluation.