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Although it has been widely appreciated for many years among physicians and microbiologists that blood cultures are among the most important laboratory tests performed in the diagnosis of serious infections (35), it has become equally apparent in more recent years that contaminated blood cultures are common (25, 42), enormously costly (3, 29), and frequently confusing for clinicians (1, 12, 14, 26). Clinical studies of bloodstream infections over 3 decades have provided guidelines for differentiating true pathogens from contaminants or organisms of unknown significance (14, 18, 41, 42); however, a true “gold standard” for differentiating pathogens from contaminants does not exist (4, 25). Moreover, the most common blood culture contaminants, coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS), which were almost always such several decades ago (18, 41), now are pathogens more frequently (19, 25, 26, 42), and judging the clinical significance of this group of microorganisms in blood has proven to be especially problematic (1, 11, 22, 24, 26, 42; S. J. Peacock, I. C. Bowler, and D. W. Crook., Letter, Lancet 346:191-192, 1995). This review focuses on how pathogen-contaminant decisions are made, the phenomenon of increasing contamination of blood cultures, potential methods for addressing high contamination rates, and practical laboratory approaches to the workup of likely contaminants.
Melvin P. Weinstein (Sun,) studied this question.