Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Two-year experience with aerobic culturing of apheresis and whole blood-derived platelets.

Transfusion 2006 October
BACKGROUND: Throughout its system of regional centers, Blood Systems implemented culture based bacterial testing with a standardized protocol for both apheresis and whole blood-derived platelets (PLTs).

STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: After a 24-hour hold, 4 mL of PLT product was inoculated into an aerobic bottle (BacT/ALERT, bioMérieux). Cultures were incubated for 24 hours before routine product release to prevent distribution of infected products while minimizing consignee notification, product retrievals, and hospital PLT inventory problems. Initial-positives were further tested (and bacteria identified) by performing cultures from the original component and subcultures from the BacT/ALERT bottle. Results were categorized according to AABB recommended definitions with minor modifications.

RESULTS: The rate of true-positive detections from culturing 122,971 apheresis PLTs was 0.017 percent (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.011%-0.026%). All true-positive microorganisms were Gram-positive with a predominance of coagulase-negative Staphylococcus and Bacillus species. Twenty of the 21 true-positive samples (95%) were detected by 24 hours but only 14 (68%) were detected by 18 hours. The false-positive rate due to contamination was 0.1 percent with the majority of isolates being skin or environmental organisms. Results did not differ significantly for whole blood-derived versus apheresis PLTs.

CONCLUSION: These data corroborate the fact that the rate of detection of truly contaminated PLT apheresis products in the United States is approximately 1 in 5000 (0.02%); this is lower than the 0.03 to 0.05 percent rates that were generally quoted in the literature before the implementation of prospective bacterial culturing programs.

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