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Accuracy of BacT/Alert Virtuo for Measuring Blood Volume for Blood Culture

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Dear Editor, Periodic monitoring of blood volume is a key performance indicator of high-quality blood culture procedures [1]. Although blood volume is the most important factor for successful blood culture… Click to show full abstract

Dear Editor, Periodic monitoring of blood volume is a key performance indicator of high-quality blood culture procedures [1]. Although blood volume is the most important factor for successful blood culture [2], its measurement remains challenging. Automatic measurement of blood volume is currently possible because of technical developments and software advances. BACTEC FX (Becton-Dickinson Microbiology Systems, Sparks, MD, USA) calculates blood volume by measuring the CO2 production of red blood cells in ≥25 bottles [3, 4]. However, its accuracy is significantly affected by low Hct (<30%) values [4]. The recently developed BacT/ Alert Virtuo instrument (bioMérieux, Marcy l’Étoile, France) can measure blood volume by scanning the sample level of each bottle. This is the first study to evaluate the accuracy of blood volume measured by this instrument. We compared the volume measured using the Virtuo instrument (henceforth, virtual volume) with the volume determined by weighing each bottle with a scale and dividing it by 1.055, the specific gravity of whole blood (henceforth, actual volume) [5]. A total of 1,212 blood culture bottles were collected between September and December 2018 from Gyeongsang National University Changwon Hospital, Changwon, Korea. We used the Virtuo instrument (version 02.01.06.928) with Myla middleware (version 4.0.0.29; bioMérieux), which improves connectivity, laboratory workflow, and information management. Virtual volume of each bottle is automatically presented as an integer by the instrument. Statistical analyses were performed using MedCalc for Windows, version 18.5 (MedCalc Software, Ostend, Belgium), and P <0.05 was considered significant. We used the KolmogorovSmirnov test for testing normal distribution and applied the interquartile range (IQR) rule to detect outliers (below the first quartile–1.5×IQR or above the third quartile+1.5×IQR). The Mann-Whitney test was used to compare the volume of aerobic and anaerobic bottles, and the Wilcoxon signed rank test was used to compare paired virtual and actual volumes. Spearman’s rank correlation was calculated between virtual and actual volumes. We excluded 71 outliers and analyzed the remaining 1,141 bottles (543 aerobic and 598 anaerobic). Median virtual volume was 6.0 (4.0–7.0) mL for all bottles and differed between aerobic and anaerobic bottles (6.0 [5.0–7.0] mL vs 5.0 [3.0–6.0] mL; P <0.0001). Median actual volume was 4.83 (3.70–5.88) mL for all bottles and did not differ significantly between aerobic and anaerobic bottles (4.83 [3.70–5.97] mL vs 4.79 [3.60–5.78] mL; P =0.7401). The optimal volume (8–12 mL) accounted for only 16.0% and 5.0% of virtual and actual volume, respectively (Fig. 1). Of all bottles, 400 pairs of aerobic and anaerobic bottles

Keywords: volume; blood volume; virtuo; blood; blood culture

Journal Title: Annals of Laboratory Medicine
Year Published: 2019

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