Background
Blood culture contamination may lead to misdiagnosis, overutilization of antibiotics, and prolonged length of stay. Blood specimen diversion devices can reduce contamination rates during blood culture collection procedures. We performed a systematic literature review and meta-analysis evaluating the influence of blood specimen diversion devices in blood culture contamination rates.
Methods
We searched MEDLINE, CINAHL, Embase, Cochrane, Scopus, and Web of Science, from database inception to March 1st, 2023, for studies evaluating the impact of a diversion device on blood culture contamination. Blood culture contamination was a positive blood culture with microorganisms not representative of true bacteremia, but rather introduced during collection or processing the blood sample. Random-effect models were used to obtain pooled mean differences, and heterogeneity was assessed using the I2 test.
Results
Of 1,768 screened studies, 12 met inclusion criteria for this systematic literature review. Of them, nine studies were included in the meta-analysis. Studies were substantially heterogeneous, but stratified analyses considering only high quality studies revealed that venipuncture using a diversion device was associated with a significant reduction in blood culture contamination in comparison to the standard procedure of collection (pooled OR, 0.26; 95% CI, 0.13–0.54; I2 = 19%). Furthermore, the stratified analysis showed that the adoption of a diversion device did not reduce the detection of true infection (pooled OR, 0.85; 95% CI, 0.65–1.11; I2 = 0%).
Conclusions
Blood culture diversion devices was associated with decreased contamination rates and could improve quality of care, reduce costs, and unnecessary antibiotic use.