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Blood culture use in the emergency department in patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness

In 2002, based on consensus practice guidelines,[1] the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) announced a core measure mandating the collection of routine blood cultures in the emergency department (ED) for all patients hospitalized with community‐acquired pneumonia (CAP) to benchmark the quality of hospital care. However, due to the limited utility and false‐positive results of routine blood cultures,[2, 3, 4, 5, 6] performance measures and practice guidelines were modified in 2005 and 2007, respectively, to recommend routine collection in only the sickest patients with CAP.[2, 7] Despite recommendations for a more narrow set of indications, the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with CAP continued to increase.[8]

Distinguishing CAP from other respiratory illnesses may be challenging. Among patients presenting to the ED with an acute respiratory illness, only a minority of patients (10%30%) are diagnosed with pneumonia.[9] Therefore, the harms and costs of inappropriate diagnostic tests for CAP may be further magnified if applied to a larger population of patients who present to the ED with similar clinical signs and symptoms as pneumonia. Using a national sample of ED visits, we examined whether there was a similar increase in the frequency of blood culture collection among patients who were hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to an illness other than pneumonia.

METHOD

Study Design, Setting, and Participants

We performed a cross‐sectional analysis using data from the 2002 to 2010 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys (NHAMCS), a probability sample of visits to EDs of noninstitutional general and short‐stay hospitals in the United States, excluding federal, military, and Veterans Administration hospitals.[10] The NHAMCS data are derived through multistage sampling and estimation procedures that produce unbiased national estimates.[11] Further details regarding the sampling and estimation procedures can be found on the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.[10, 11] Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted because NHAMCS did not collect blood culture use during this period. We included all visits by patients aged 18 years or older who were subsequently hospitalized.

Measurements

Trained hospital staff collected data with oversight from US Census Bureau field representatives.[12] Blood culture collection during the visit was recorded as a checkbox on the NHAMCS data collection form if at least 1 culture was ordered or collected in the ED. Visits for conditions that may resemble pneumonia were defined as visits with a respiratory symptom listed for at least 1 of the 3 reason for visit fields, excluding those visits admitted with a diagnosis of pneumonia (International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification [ICD‐9‐CM] codes 481.xx‐486.xx). The reason for visit field captures the patient's complaints, symptoms, or other reasons for the visit in the patient's own words. CAP was defined by having 1 of the 3 ED provider's diagnosis fields coded as pneumonia (ICD‐9‐CM 481486), excluding patients with suspected hospital‐acquired pneumonia (nursing home or institutionalized resident, seen in the ED in the past 72 hours, or discharged from any hospital within the past 7 days) or those with a follow‐up visit for the same problem.[8]

Data Analysis

All analyses accounted for the complex survey design, including weights, to reflect national estimates. To examine for potential spillover effects of the blood culture recommendations for CAP on other conditions that may present similarly, we used linear regression to examine the trend in collecting blood cultures in patients admitted to the hospital with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness.

The data were analyzed using Stata statistical software, version 12.0 (StataCorp, College Station, TX). This study was exempt from review by the institutional review board of the University of California, San Francisco and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

RESULTS

This study included 4854 ED visits, representing approximately 17 million visits by adult patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness. The most common primary ED provider's diagnoses for these visits included heart failure (15.9%), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (12.6%), chest pain (11.9%), respiratory insufficiency or failure (8.8%), and asthma (5.5%). The characteristics of these visits are shown in Table 1.

Characteristics of Visits to the ED by Patients Hospitalized With Respiratory Symptoms Due to a Nonpneumonia Illness From 2002 to 2010
Years 20022004, Weighted % (Unweighted N=2,175)b Years 20072008, Weighted % (Unweighted N=1,346)b Years 20092010, Weighted % (Unweighted N=1,333)b
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: ED, emergency department; ICU, intensive care unit.

  • Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted for missing the blood culture field in the survey.

  • Percentages shown are weighted to reflect complex survey design. All estimates are considered to be reliable (standard errors below the 30% threshold recommended by the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey for reporting data and 30 or more unweighted observations per subgroup).

  • Excludes year 2002 due to incomplete ethnicity ascertainment (unweighted number for race/ethnicity ascertainment=1,496).

  • Only for years 2007 to 2010, which included oxygen saturation in the survey.

Blood culture collected 9.8 14.4 19.9
Demographics
Age 65 years 56.9 55.1 50.9
Female 54.0 57.5 51.3
Race/ethnicity
White, non‐Hispanic 71.5c 69.5 67.2
Black, non‐Hispanic 17.1c 20.8 22.2
Other 11.3c 9.7 10.6
Primary payer
Private insurance 23.4 19.1 19.1
Medicare 55.2 58.0 54.2
Medicaid 10.0 10.5 13.8
Other/unknown 11.4 12.4 13.0
Visit characteristics
Disposition status
Non‐ICU 86.8 85.5 83.3
ICU 13.2 14.5 16.7
Fever (38.0C) 6.1 5.3 4.8
Hypoxia (<90%)d 11.5 10.9
Emergent status by triage 46.1 44.5 35.8
Administered antibiotics 19.6 24.6 24.8
Tests/services ordered in ED
05 29.9 29.1 22.3
610 43.5 58.3 56.1
>10 26.6 12.6 21.6
ED characteristics
Region
West 16.6 18.2 15.8
Midwest 27.1 25.2 22.8
South 32.8 36.4 38.6
Northeast 23.5 20.2 22.7
Hospital owner
Nonprofit 80.6 84.6 80.7
Government 12.1 6.4 13.0
Private 7.4 9.0 6.3

The proportion of blood cultures collected in the ED for patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness increased from 9.9% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 7.1%‐13.5%) in 2002 to 20.4% (95% CI: 16.1%‐25.6%) in 2010 (P<0.001 for the trend). This observed increase paralleled the increase in the frequency of culture collection in patients hospitalized with CAP (P=0.12 for the difference in temporal trends). The estimated absolute number of visits for respiratory symptoms due a nonpneumonia illness with a blood culture collected increased from 211,000 (95% CI: 126,000296,000) in 2002 to 526,000 (95% CI: 361,000692,000) in 2010, which was similar in magnitude to the estimated number of visits for CAP with a culture collected (Table 2).

Emergency Department Visits With a Blood Culture Collected in Patients Subsequently Hospitalized, Stratified by Select Conditions
National Weighted Estimates (95% CI)
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CAP, community‐acquired pneumonia; CI, confidence interval; ICD‐9, International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision.

  • Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted for missing the blood culture field in the survey.

  • Linear trend analysis.

  • Respiratory symptoms were defined by the patient's reason for visit. Excludes visits with an emergency department provider's diagnosis of pneumonia (ICD‐9 481486).

Condition 2002 2003 2004 2007 2008 2009 2010 P Valueb
Respiratory symptomc
% 9.9 (7.113.5) 9.2 (6.912.2) 10.6 (7.914.1) 13.5 (10.117.8) 15.2 (12.118.8) 19.4 (15.923.5) 20.4 (16.125.6) <0.001
No., thousands 211 (126296) 229 (140319) 212 (140285) 287 (191382) 418 (288548) 486 (344627) 526 (361692)
CAP
% 29.4 (21.938.3) 34.2 (25.943.6) 38.4 (31.045.4) 45.7 (35.456.4) 44.1 (34.154.6) 46.7 (37.456.1) 51.1 (41.860.3) 0.027
No., thousands 155 (100210) 287 (177397) 276 (192361) 277 (173381) 361 (255467) 350 (237464) 428 (283574)

DISCUSSION

In this national study of ED visits, we found that the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to an illness other than pneumonia continued to increase from 2002 to 2010 in a parallel fashion to the trend observed for patients hospitalized with CAP. Our findings suggest that the heightened attention of collecting blood cultures for suspected pneumonia had unintended consequences, which led to an increase in the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with conditions that mimic pneumonia in the ED.

There can be a great deal of diagnostic uncertainty when treating patients in the ED who present with acute respiratory symptoms. Unfortunately, the initial history and physical exam are often insufficient to effectively rule in CAP.[13] Furthermore, the challenge of diagnosing pneumonia is amplified in the subset of patients who present with evolving, atypical, or occult disease. Faced with this diagnostic uncertainty, ED providers may feel pressured to comply with performance measures for CAP, promoting the overuse of inappropriate diagnostic tests and treatments. For instance, efforts to comply with early antibiotic administration in patients with CAP have led to an increase in unnecessary antibiotic use among patients with a diagnosis other than CAP.[14] Due to concerns for these unintended consequences, the core measure for early antibiotic administration was effectively retired in 2012.

Although a smaller percentage of ED visits for respiratory symptoms had a blood culture collected compared to CAP visits, there was a similar absolute number of visits with a blood culture collected during the study period. While a fraction of these patients may present with an infectious etiology aside from pneumonia, the majority of these cases likely represent situations where blood cultures add little diagnostic value at the expense of potentially longer hospital stays and broad spectrum antimicrobial use due to false‐positive results,[5, 15] as well as higher costs incurred by the test itself.[15, 16]

Although recommendations for routine culture collection for all patients hospitalized with CAP have been revised, the JCAHO/CMS core measure (PN‐3b) announced in 2002 mandates that if a culture is collected in the ED, it should be collected prior to antibiotic administration. Due to inherent uncertainty and challenges in making a timely diagnosis of pneumonia, this measure may encourage providers to reflexively order cultures in all patients presenting with respiratory symptoms in whom antibiotic administration is anticipated. The observed increasing trend in culture collection in patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness should prompt JCAHO and CMS to reevaluate the risks and benefits of this core measure, with consideration of eliminating it altogether to discourage overuse in this population.

Our study had certain limitations. First, the omission of 2005 and 2006 data prohibited an evaluation of whether culture rates slowed down among patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness after revisions in recommendations for obtaining cultures in patients with CAP. Second, there may have been misclassification of culture collection due to errors in chart abstraction. However, abstraction errors in the NHAMCS typically result in undercoding.[17] Therefore, our findings likely underestimate the magnitude and frequency of culture collection in this population.

In conclusion, collecting blood cultures in the ED for patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness has increased in a parallel fashion compared to the trend in culture collection in patients hospitalized with CAP from 2002 to 2010. This suggests an important potential unintended consequence of blood culture recommendations for CAP on patients who present with conditions that resemble pneumonia. More attention to the judicious use of blood cultures in these patients to reduce harm and costs is needed.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Disclosures: Dr. Makam's work on this project was completed while he was a Primary Care Research Fellow at the University of California San Francisco, funded by an NRSA training grant (T32HP19025‐07‐00). The authors report no conflicts of interest.

Files
References
  1. Bartlett JG, Dowell SF, Mandell LA, File TM, Musher DM, Fine MJ. Practice guidelines for the management of community‐acquired pneumonia in adults. Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clin Infect Dis. 2000;31(2):347382.
  2. Mandell LA, Wunderink RG, Anzueto A, et al. Infectious Diseases Society of America/American Thoracic Society consensus guidelines on the management of community‐acquired pneumonia in adults. Clin Infect Dis. 2007;44(suppl 2):S27S72.
  3. Campbell SG, Marrie TJ, Anstey R, Dickinson G, Ackroyd‐Stolarz S. The contribution of blood cultures to the clinical management of adult patients admitted to the hospital with community‐acquired pneumonia: a prospective observational study. Chest. 2003;123(4):11421150.
  4. Kennedy M, Bates DW, Wright SB, Ruiz R, Wolfe RE, Shapiro NI. Do emergency department blood cultures change practice in patients with pneumonia? Ann Emerg Med. 2005;46(5):393400.
  5. Metersky ML, Ma A, Bratzler DW, Houck PM. Predicting bacteremia in patients with community‐acquired pneumonia. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2004;169(3):342347.
  6. Waterer GW, Wunderink RG. The influence of the severity of community‐acquired pneumonia on the usefulness of blood cultures. Respir Med. 2001;95(1):7882.
  7. Walls RM, Resnick J. The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations and Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services community‐acquired pneumonia initiative: what went wrong? Ann Emerg Med. 2005;46(5):409411.
  8. Makam AN, Auerbach AD, Steinman MA. Blood culture use in the emergency department in patients hospitalized for community‐acquired pneumonia [published online ahead of print March 10, 2014]. JAMA Intern Med. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.13808.
  9. Heckerling PS, Tape TG, Wigton RS, et al. Clinical prediction rule for pulmonary infiltrates. Ann Intern Med. 1990;113(9):664670.
  10. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NHAMCS scope and sample design. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/ahcd/ahcd_scope.htm#nhamcs_scope. Accessed May 27, 2013.
  11. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NHAMCS estimation procedures. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/ahcd/ahcd_estimation_procedures.htm#nhamcs_procedures. Updated January 15, 2010. Accessed May 27, 2013.
  12. McCaig LF, Burt CW, Schappert SM, et al. NHAMCS: does it hold up to scrutiny? Ann Emerg Med. 2013;62(5):549551.
  13. Metlay JP, Kapoor WN, Fine MJ. Does this patient have community‐acquired pneumonia? Diagnosing pneumonia by history and physical examination. JAMA. 1997;278(17):14401445.
  14. Kanwar M, Brar N, Khatib R, Fakih MG. Misdiagnosis of community‐acquired pneumonia and inappropriate utilization of antibiotics: side effects of the 4‐h antibiotic administration rule. Chest. 2007;131(6):18651869.
  15. Bates DW, Goldman L, Lee TH. Contaminant blood cultures and resource utilization. The true consequences of false‐positive results. JAMA. 1991;265(3):365369.
  16. Zwang O, Albert RK. Analysis of strategies to improve cost effectiveness of blood cultures. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(5):272276.
  17. Cooper RJ. NHAMCS: does it hold up to scrutiny? Ann Emerg Med. 2012;60(6):722725.
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In 2002, based on consensus practice guidelines,[1] the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) announced a core measure mandating the collection of routine blood cultures in the emergency department (ED) for all patients hospitalized with community‐acquired pneumonia (CAP) to benchmark the quality of hospital care. However, due to the limited utility and false‐positive results of routine blood cultures,[2, 3, 4, 5, 6] performance measures and practice guidelines were modified in 2005 and 2007, respectively, to recommend routine collection in only the sickest patients with CAP.[2, 7] Despite recommendations for a more narrow set of indications, the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with CAP continued to increase.[8]

Distinguishing CAP from other respiratory illnesses may be challenging. Among patients presenting to the ED with an acute respiratory illness, only a minority of patients (10%30%) are diagnosed with pneumonia.[9] Therefore, the harms and costs of inappropriate diagnostic tests for CAP may be further magnified if applied to a larger population of patients who present to the ED with similar clinical signs and symptoms as pneumonia. Using a national sample of ED visits, we examined whether there was a similar increase in the frequency of blood culture collection among patients who were hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to an illness other than pneumonia.

METHOD

Study Design, Setting, and Participants

We performed a cross‐sectional analysis using data from the 2002 to 2010 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys (NHAMCS), a probability sample of visits to EDs of noninstitutional general and short‐stay hospitals in the United States, excluding federal, military, and Veterans Administration hospitals.[10] The NHAMCS data are derived through multistage sampling and estimation procedures that produce unbiased national estimates.[11] Further details regarding the sampling and estimation procedures can be found on the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.[10, 11] Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted because NHAMCS did not collect blood culture use during this period. We included all visits by patients aged 18 years or older who were subsequently hospitalized.

Measurements

Trained hospital staff collected data with oversight from US Census Bureau field representatives.[12] Blood culture collection during the visit was recorded as a checkbox on the NHAMCS data collection form if at least 1 culture was ordered or collected in the ED. Visits for conditions that may resemble pneumonia were defined as visits with a respiratory symptom listed for at least 1 of the 3 reason for visit fields, excluding those visits admitted with a diagnosis of pneumonia (International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification [ICD‐9‐CM] codes 481.xx‐486.xx). The reason for visit field captures the patient's complaints, symptoms, or other reasons for the visit in the patient's own words. CAP was defined by having 1 of the 3 ED provider's diagnosis fields coded as pneumonia (ICD‐9‐CM 481486), excluding patients with suspected hospital‐acquired pneumonia (nursing home or institutionalized resident, seen in the ED in the past 72 hours, or discharged from any hospital within the past 7 days) or those with a follow‐up visit for the same problem.[8]

Data Analysis

All analyses accounted for the complex survey design, including weights, to reflect national estimates. To examine for potential spillover effects of the blood culture recommendations for CAP on other conditions that may present similarly, we used linear regression to examine the trend in collecting blood cultures in patients admitted to the hospital with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness.

The data were analyzed using Stata statistical software, version 12.0 (StataCorp, College Station, TX). This study was exempt from review by the institutional review board of the University of California, San Francisco and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

RESULTS

This study included 4854 ED visits, representing approximately 17 million visits by adult patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness. The most common primary ED provider's diagnoses for these visits included heart failure (15.9%), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (12.6%), chest pain (11.9%), respiratory insufficiency or failure (8.8%), and asthma (5.5%). The characteristics of these visits are shown in Table 1.

Characteristics of Visits to the ED by Patients Hospitalized With Respiratory Symptoms Due to a Nonpneumonia Illness From 2002 to 2010
Years 20022004, Weighted % (Unweighted N=2,175)b Years 20072008, Weighted % (Unweighted N=1,346)b Years 20092010, Weighted % (Unweighted N=1,333)b
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: ED, emergency department; ICU, intensive care unit.

  • Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted for missing the blood culture field in the survey.

  • Percentages shown are weighted to reflect complex survey design. All estimates are considered to be reliable (standard errors below the 30% threshold recommended by the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey for reporting data and 30 or more unweighted observations per subgroup).

  • Excludes year 2002 due to incomplete ethnicity ascertainment (unweighted number for race/ethnicity ascertainment=1,496).

  • Only for years 2007 to 2010, which included oxygen saturation in the survey.

Blood culture collected 9.8 14.4 19.9
Demographics
Age 65 years 56.9 55.1 50.9
Female 54.0 57.5 51.3
Race/ethnicity
White, non‐Hispanic 71.5c 69.5 67.2
Black, non‐Hispanic 17.1c 20.8 22.2
Other 11.3c 9.7 10.6
Primary payer
Private insurance 23.4 19.1 19.1
Medicare 55.2 58.0 54.2
Medicaid 10.0 10.5 13.8
Other/unknown 11.4 12.4 13.0
Visit characteristics
Disposition status
Non‐ICU 86.8 85.5 83.3
ICU 13.2 14.5 16.7
Fever (38.0C) 6.1 5.3 4.8
Hypoxia (<90%)d 11.5 10.9
Emergent status by triage 46.1 44.5 35.8
Administered antibiotics 19.6 24.6 24.8
Tests/services ordered in ED
05 29.9 29.1 22.3
610 43.5 58.3 56.1
>10 26.6 12.6 21.6
ED characteristics
Region
West 16.6 18.2 15.8
Midwest 27.1 25.2 22.8
South 32.8 36.4 38.6
Northeast 23.5 20.2 22.7
Hospital owner
Nonprofit 80.6 84.6 80.7
Government 12.1 6.4 13.0
Private 7.4 9.0 6.3

The proportion of blood cultures collected in the ED for patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness increased from 9.9% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 7.1%‐13.5%) in 2002 to 20.4% (95% CI: 16.1%‐25.6%) in 2010 (P<0.001 for the trend). This observed increase paralleled the increase in the frequency of culture collection in patients hospitalized with CAP (P=0.12 for the difference in temporal trends). The estimated absolute number of visits for respiratory symptoms due a nonpneumonia illness with a blood culture collected increased from 211,000 (95% CI: 126,000296,000) in 2002 to 526,000 (95% CI: 361,000692,000) in 2010, which was similar in magnitude to the estimated number of visits for CAP with a culture collected (Table 2).

Emergency Department Visits With a Blood Culture Collected in Patients Subsequently Hospitalized, Stratified by Select Conditions
National Weighted Estimates (95% CI)
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CAP, community‐acquired pneumonia; CI, confidence interval; ICD‐9, International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision.

  • Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted for missing the blood culture field in the survey.

  • Linear trend analysis.

  • Respiratory symptoms were defined by the patient's reason for visit. Excludes visits with an emergency department provider's diagnosis of pneumonia (ICD‐9 481486).

Condition 2002 2003 2004 2007 2008 2009 2010 P Valueb
Respiratory symptomc
% 9.9 (7.113.5) 9.2 (6.912.2) 10.6 (7.914.1) 13.5 (10.117.8) 15.2 (12.118.8) 19.4 (15.923.5) 20.4 (16.125.6) <0.001
No., thousands 211 (126296) 229 (140319) 212 (140285) 287 (191382) 418 (288548) 486 (344627) 526 (361692)
CAP
% 29.4 (21.938.3) 34.2 (25.943.6) 38.4 (31.045.4) 45.7 (35.456.4) 44.1 (34.154.6) 46.7 (37.456.1) 51.1 (41.860.3) 0.027
No., thousands 155 (100210) 287 (177397) 276 (192361) 277 (173381) 361 (255467) 350 (237464) 428 (283574)

DISCUSSION

In this national study of ED visits, we found that the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to an illness other than pneumonia continued to increase from 2002 to 2010 in a parallel fashion to the trend observed for patients hospitalized with CAP. Our findings suggest that the heightened attention of collecting blood cultures for suspected pneumonia had unintended consequences, which led to an increase in the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with conditions that mimic pneumonia in the ED.

There can be a great deal of diagnostic uncertainty when treating patients in the ED who present with acute respiratory symptoms. Unfortunately, the initial history and physical exam are often insufficient to effectively rule in CAP.[13] Furthermore, the challenge of diagnosing pneumonia is amplified in the subset of patients who present with evolving, atypical, or occult disease. Faced with this diagnostic uncertainty, ED providers may feel pressured to comply with performance measures for CAP, promoting the overuse of inappropriate diagnostic tests and treatments. For instance, efforts to comply with early antibiotic administration in patients with CAP have led to an increase in unnecessary antibiotic use among patients with a diagnosis other than CAP.[14] Due to concerns for these unintended consequences, the core measure for early antibiotic administration was effectively retired in 2012.

Although a smaller percentage of ED visits for respiratory symptoms had a blood culture collected compared to CAP visits, there was a similar absolute number of visits with a blood culture collected during the study period. While a fraction of these patients may present with an infectious etiology aside from pneumonia, the majority of these cases likely represent situations where blood cultures add little diagnostic value at the expense of potentially longer hospital stays and broad spectrum antimicrobial use due to false‐positive results,[5, 15] as well as higher costs incurred by the test itself.[15, 16]

Although recommendations for routine culture collection for all patients hospitalized with CAP have been revised, the JCAHO/CMS core measure (PN‐3b) announced in 2002 mandates that if a culture is collected in the ED, it should be collected prior to antibiotic administration. Due to inherent uncertainty and challenges in making a timely diagnosis of pneumonia, this measure may encourage providers to reflexively order cultures in all patients presenting with respiratory symptoms in whom antibiotic administration is anticipated. The observed increasing trend in culture collection in patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness should prompt JCAHO and CMS to reevaluate the risks and benefits of this core measure, with consideration of eliminating it altogether to discourage overuse in this population.

Our study had certain limitations. First, the omission of 2005 and 2006 data prohibited an evaluation of whether culture rates slowed down among patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness after revisions in recommendations for obtaining cultures in patients with CAP. Second, there may have been misclassification of culture collection due to errors in chart abstraction. However, abstraction errors in the NHAMCS typically result in undercoding.[17] Therefore, our findings likely underestimate the magnitude and frequency of culture collection in this population.

In conclusion, collecting blood cultures in the ED for patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness has increased in a parallel fashion compared to the trend in culture collection in patients hospitalized with CAP from 2002 to 2010. This suggests an important potential unintended consequence of blood culture recommendations for CAP on patients who present with conditions that resemble pneumonia. More attention to the judicious use of blood cultures in these patients to reduce harm and costs is needed.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Disclosures: Dr. Makam's work on this project was completed while he was a Primary Care Research Fellow at the University of California San Francisco, funded by an NRSA training grant (T32HP19025‐07‐00). The authors report no conflicts of interest.

In 2002, based on consensus practice guidelines,[1] the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) announced a core measure mandating the collection of routine blood cultures in the emergency department (ED) for all patients hospitalized with community‐acquired pneumonia (CAP) to benchmark the quality of hospital care. However, due to the limited utility and false‐positive results of routine blood cultures,[2, 3, 4, 5, 6] performance measures and practice guidelines were modified in 2005 and 2007, respectively, to recommend routine collection in only the sickest patients with CAP.[2, 7] Despite recommendations for a more narrow set of indications, the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with CAP continued to increase.[8]

Distinguishing CAP from other respiratory illnesses may be challenging. Among patients presenting to the ED with an acute respiratory illness, only a minority of patients (10%30%) are diagnosed with pneumonia.[9] Therefore, the harms and costs of inappropriate diagnostic tests for CAP may be further magnified if applied to a larger population of patients who present to the ED with similar clinical signs and symptoms as pneumonia. Using a national sample of ED visits, we examined whether there was a similar increase in the frequency of blood culture collection among patients who were hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to an illness other than pneumonia.

METHOD

Study Design, Setting, and Participants

We performed a cross‐sectional analysis using data from the 2002 to 2010 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Surveys (NHAMCS), a probability sample of visits to EDs of noninstitutional general and short‐stay hospitals in the United States, excluding federal, military, and Veterans Administration hospitals.[10] The NHAMCS data are derived through multistage sampling and estimation procedures that produce unbiased national estimates.[11] Further details regarding the sampling and estimation procedures can be found on the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.[10, 11] Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted because NHAMCS did not collect blood culture use during this period. We included all visits by patients aged 18 years or older who were subsequently hospitalized.

Measurements

Trained hospital staff collected data with oversight from US Census Bureau field representatives.[12] Blood culture collection during the visit was recorded as a checkbox on the NHAMCS data collection form if at least 1 culture was ordered or collected in the ED. Visits for conditions that may resemble pneumonia were defined as visits with a respiratory symptom listed for at least 1 of the 3 reason for visit fields, excluding those visits admitted with a diagnosis of pneumonia (International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification [ICD‐9‐CM] codes 481.xx‐486.xx). The reason for visit field captures the patient's complaints, symptoms, or other reasons for the visit in the patient's own words. CAP was defined by having 1 of the 3 ED provider's diagnosis fields coded as pneumonia (ICD‐9‐CM 481486), excluding patients with suspected hospital‐acquired pneumonia (nursing home or institutionalized resident, seen in the ED in the past 72 hours, or discharged from any hospital within the past 7 days) or those with a follow‐up visit for the same problem.[8]

Data Analysis

All analyses accounted for the complex survey design, including weights, to reflect national estimates. To examine for potential spillover effects of the blood culture recommendations for CAP on other conditions that may present similarly, we used linear regression to examine the trend in collecting blood cultures in patients admitted to the hospital with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness.

The data were analyzed using Stata statistical software, version 12.0 (StataCorp, College Station, TX). This study was exempt from review by the institutional review board of the University of California, San Francisco and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center.

RESULTS

This study included 4854 ED visits, representing approximately 17 million visits by adult patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness. The most common primary ED provider's diagnoses for these visits included heart failure (15.9%), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (12.6%), chest pain (11.9%), respiratory insufficiency or failure (8.8%), and asthma (5.5%). The characteristics of these visits are shown in Table 1.

Characteristics of Visits to the ED by Patients Hospitalized With Respiratory Symptoms Due to a Nonpneumonia Illness From 2002 to 2010
Years 20022004, Weighted % (Unweighted N=2,175)b Years 20072008, Weighted % (Unweighted N=1,346)b Years 20092010, Weighted % (Unweighted N=1,333)b
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: ED, emergency department; ICU, intensive care unit.

  • Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted for missing the blood culture field in the survey.

  • Percentages shown are weighted to reflect complex survey design. All estimates are considered to be reliable (standard errors below the 30% threshold recommended by the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey for reporting data and 30 or more unweighted observations per subgroup).

  • Excludes year 2002 due to incomplete ethnicity ascertainment (unweighted number for race/ethnicity ascertainment=1,496).

  • Only for years 2007 to 2010, which included oxygen saturation in the survey.

Blood culture collected 9.8 14.4 19.9
Demographics
Age 65 years 56.9 55.1 50.9
Female 54.0 57.5 51.3
Race/ethnicity
White, non‐Hispanic 71.5c 69.5 67.2
Black, non‐Hispanic 17.1c 20.8 22.2
Other 11.3c 9.7 10.6
Primary payer
Private insurance 23.4 19.1 19.1
Medicare 55.2 58.0 54.2
Medicaid 10.0 10.5 13.8
Other/unknown 11.4 12.4 13.0
Visit characteristics
Disposition status
Non‐ICU 86.8 85.5 83.3
ICU 13.2 14.5 16.7
Fever (38.0C) 6.1 5.3 4.8
Hypoxia (<90%)d 11.5 10.9
Emergent status by triage 46.1 44.5 35.8
Administered antibiotics 19.6 24.6 24.8
Tests/services ordered in ED
05 29.9 29.1 22.3
610 43.5 58.3 56.1
>10 26.6 12.6 21.6
ED characteristics
Region
West 16.6 18.2 15.8
Midwest 27.1 25.2 22.8
South 32.8 36.4 38.6
Northeast 23.5 20.2 22.7
Hospital owner
Nonprofit 80.6 84.6 80.7
Government 12.1 6.4 13.0
Private 7.4 9.0 6.3

The proportion of blood cultures collected in the ED for patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness increased from 9.9% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 7.1%‐13.5%) in 2002 to 20.4% (95% CI: 16.1%‐25.6%) in 2010 (P<0.001 for the trend). This observed increase paralleled the increase in the frequency of culture collection in patients hospitalized with CAP (P=0.12 for the difference in temporal trends). The estimated absolute number of visits for respiratory symptoms due a nonpneumonia illness with a blood culture collected increased from 211,000 (95% CI: 126,000296,000) in 2002 to 526,000 (95% CI: 361,000692,000) in 2010, which was similar in magnitude to the estimated number of visits for CAP with a culture collected (Table 2).

Emergency Department Visits With a Blood Culture Collected in Patients Subsequently Hospitalized, Stratified by Select Conditions
National Weighted Estimates (95% CI)
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: CAP, community‐acquired pneumonia; CI, confidence interval; ICD‐9, International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision.

  • Years 2005 and 2006 are omitted for missing the blood culture field in the survey.

  • Linear trend analysis.

  • Respiratory symptoms were defined by the patient's reason for visit. Excludes visits with an emergency department provider's diagnosis of pneumonia (ICD‐9 481486).

Condition 2002 2003 2004 2007 2008 2009 2010 P Valueb
Respiratory symptomc
% 9.9 (7.113.5) 9.2 (6.912.2) 10.6 (7.914.1) 13.5 (10.117.8) 15.2 (12.118.8) 19.4 (15.923.5) 20.4 (16.125.6) <0.001
No., thousands 211 (126296) 229 (140319) 212 (140285) 287 (191382) 418 (288548) 486 (344627) 526 (361692)
CAP
% 29.4 (21.938.3) 34.2 (25.943.6) 38.4 (31.045.4) 45.7 (35.456.4) 44.1 (34.154.6) 46.7 (37.456.1) 51.1 (41.860.3) 0.027
No., thousands 155 (100210) 287 (177397) 276 (192361) 277 (173381) 361 (255467) 350 (237464) 428 (283574)

DISCUSSION

In this national study of ED visits, we found that the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to an illness other than pneumonia continued to increase from 2002 to 2010 in a parallel fashion to the trend observed for patients hospitalized with CAP. Our findings suggest that the heightened attention of collecting blood cultures for suspected pneumonia had unintended consequences, which led to an increase in the collection of blood cultures in patients hospitalized with conditions that mimic pneumonia in the ED.

There can be a great deal of diagnostic uncertainty when treating patients in the ED who present with acute respiratory symptoms. Unfortunately, the initial history and physical exam are often insufficient to effectively rule in CAP.[13] Furthermore, the challenge of diagnosing pneumonia is amplified in the subset of patients who present with evolving, atypical, or occult disease. Faced with this diagnostic uncertainty, ED providers may feel pressured to comply with performance measures for CAP, promoting the overuse of inappropriate diagnostic tests and treatments. For instance, efforts to comply with early antibiotic administration in patients with CAP have led to an increase in unnecessary antibiotic use among patients with a diagnosis other than CAP.[14] Due to concerns for these unintended consequences, the core measure for early antibiotic administration was effectively retired in 2012.

Although a smaller percentage of ED visits for respiratory symptoms had a blood culture collected compared to CAP visits, there was a similar absolute number of visits with a blood culture collected during the study period. While a fraction of these patients may present with an infectious etiology aside from pneumonia, the majority of these cases likely represent situations where blood cultures add little diagnostic value at the expense of potentially longer hospital stays and broad spectrum antimicrobial use due to false‐positive results,[5, 15] as well as higher costs incurred by the test itself.[15, 16]

Although recommendations for routine culture collection for all patients hospitalized with CAP have been revised, the JCAHO/CMS core measure (PN‐3b) announced in 2002 mandates that if a culture is collected in the ED, it should be collected prior to antibiotic administration. Due to inherent uncertainty and challenges in making a timely diagnosis of pneumonia, this measure may encourage providers to reflexively order cultures in all patients presenting with respiratory symptoms in whom antibiotic administration is anticipated. The observed increasing trend in culture collection in patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness should prompt JCAHO and CMS to reevaluate the risks and benefits of this core measure, with consideration of eliminating it altogether to discourage overuse in this population.

Our study had certain limitations. First, the omission of 2005 and 2006 data prohibited an evaluation of whether culture rates slowed down among patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness after revisions in recommendations for obtaining cultures in patients with CAP. Second, there may have been misclassification of culture collection due to errors in chart abstraction. However, abstraction errors in the NHAMCS typically result in undercoding.[17] Therefore, our findings likely underestimate the magnitude and frequency of culture collection in this population.

In conclusion, collecting blood cultures in the ED for patients hospitalized with respiratory symptoms due to a nonpneumonia illness has increased in a parallel fashion compared to the trend in culture collection in patients hospitalized with CAP from 2002 to 2010. This suggests an important potential unintended consequence of blood culture recommendations for CAP on patients who present with conditions that resemble pneumonia. More attention to the judicious use of blood cultures in these patients to reduce harm and costs is needed.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Disclosures: Dr. Makam's work on this project was completed while he was a Primary Care Research Fellow at the University of California San Francisco, funded by an NRSA training grant (T32HP19025‐07‐00). The authors report no conflicts of interest.

References
  1. Bartlett JG, Dowell SF, Mandell LA, File TM, Musher DM, Fine MJ. Practice guidelines for the management of community‐acquired pneumonia in adults. Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clin Infect Dis. 2000;31(2):347382.
  2. Mandell LA, Wunderink RG, Anzueto A, et al. Infectious Diseases Society of America/American Thoracic Society consensus guidelines on the management of community‐acquired pneumonia in adults. Clin Infect Dis. 2007;44(suppl 2):S27S72.
  3. Campbell SG, Marrie TJ, Anstey R, Dickinson G, Ackroyd‐Stolarz S. The contribution of blood cultures to the clinical management of adult patients admitted to the hospital with community‐acquired pneumonia: a prospective observational study. Chest. 2003;123(4):11421150.
  4. Kennedy M, Bates DW, Wright SB, Ruiz R, Wolfe RE, Shapiro NI. Do emergency department blood cultures change practice in patients with pneumonia? Ann Emerg Med. 2005;46(5):393400.
  5. Metersky ML, Ma A, Bratzler DW, Houck PM. Predicting bacteremia in patients with community‐acquired pneumonia. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2004;169(3):342347.
  6. Waterer GW, Wunderink RG. The influence of the severity of community‐acquired pneumonia on the usefulness of blood cultures. Respir Med. 2001;95(1):7882.
  7. Walls RM, Resnick J. The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations and Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services community‐acquired pneumonia initiative: what went wrong? Ann Emerg Med. 2005;46(5):409411.
  8. Makam AN, Auerbach AD, Steinman MA. Blood culture use in the emergency department in patients hospitalized for community‐acquired pneumonia [published online ahead of print March 10, 2014]. JAMA Intern Med. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.13808.
  9. Heckerling PS, Tape TG, Wigton RS, et al. Clinical prediction rule for pulmonary infiltrates. Ann Intern Med. 1990;113(9):664670.
  10. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NHAMCS scope and sample design. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/ahcd/ahcd_scope.htm#nhamcs_scope. Accessed May 27, 2013.
  11. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NHAMCS estimation procedures. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/ahcd/ahcd_estimation_procedures.htm#nhamcs_procedures. Updated January 15, 2010. Accessed May 27, 2013.
  12. McCaig LF, Burt CW, Schappert SM, et al. NHAMCS: does it hold up to scrutiny? Ann Emerg Med. 2013;62(5):549551.
  13. Metlay JP, Kapoor WN, Fine MJ. Does this patient have community‐acquired pneumonia? Diagnosing pneumonia by history and physical examination. JAMA. 1997;278(17):14401445.
  14. Kanwar M, Brar N, Khatib R, Fakih MG. Misdiagnosis of community‐acquired pneumonia and inappropriate utilization of antibiotics: side effects of the 4‐h antibiotic administration rule. Chest. 2007;131(6):18651869.
  15. Bates DW, Goldman L, Lee TH. Contaminant blood cultures and resource utilization. The true consequences of false‐positive results. JAMA. 1991;265(3):365369.
  16. Zwang O, Albert RK. Analysis of strategies to improve cost effectiveness of blood cultures. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(5):272276.
  17. Cooper RJ. NHAMCS: does it hold up to scrutiny? Ann Emerg Med. 2012;60(6):722725.
References
  1. Bartlett JG, Dowell SF, Mandell LA, File TM, Musher DM, Fine MJ. Practice guidelines for the management of community‐acquired pneumonia in adults. Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clin Infect Dis. 2000;31(2):347382.
  2. Mandell LA, Wunderink RG, Anzueto A, et al. Infectious Diseases Society of America/American Thoracic Society consensus guidelines on the management of community‐acquired pneumonia in adults. Clin Infect Dis. 2007;44(suppl 2):S27S72.
  3. Campbell SG, Marrie TJ, Anstey R, Dickinson G, Ackroyd‐Stolarz S. The contribution of blood cultures to the clinical management of adult patients admitted to the hospital with community‐acquired pneumonia: a prospective observational study. Chest. 2003;123(4):11421150.
  4. Kennedy M, Bates DW, Wright SB, Ruiz R, Wolfe RE, Shapiro NI. Do emergency department blood cultures change practice in patients with pneumonia? Ann Emerg Med. 2005;46(5):393400.
  5. Metersky ML, Ma A, Bratzler DW, Houck PM. Predicting bacteremia in patients with community‐acquired pneumonia. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2004;169(3):342347.
  6. Waterer GW, Wunderink RG. The influence of the severity of community‐acquired pneumonia on the usefulness of blood cultures. Respir Med. 2001;95(1):7882.
  7. Walls RM, Resnick J. The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations and Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services community‐acquired pneumonia initiative: what went wrong? Ann Emerg Med. 2005;46(5):409411.
  8. Makam AN, Auerbach AD, Steinman MA. Blood culture use in the emergency department in patients hospitalized for community‐acquired pneumonia [published online ahead of print March 10, 2014]. JAMA Intern Med. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.13808.
  9. Heckerling PS, Tape TG, Wigton RS, et al. Clinical prediction rule for pulmonary infiltrates. Ann Intern Med. 1990;113(9):664670.
  10. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NHAMCS scope and sample design. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/ahcd/ahcd_scope.htm#nhamcs_scope. Accessed May 27, 2013.
  11. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NHAMCS estimation procedures. http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/ahcd/ahcd_estimation_procedures.htm#nhamcs_procedures. Updated January 15, 2010. Accessed May 27, 2013.
  12. McCaig LF, Burt CW, Schappert SM, et al. NHAMCS: does it hold up to scrutiny? Ann Emerg Med. 2013;62(5):549551.
  13. Metlay JP, Kapoor WN, Fine MJ. Does this patient have community‐acquired pneumonia? Diagnosing pneumonia by history and physical examination. JAMA. 1997;278(17):14401445.
  14. Kanwar M, Brar N, Khatib R, Fakih MG. Misdiagnosis of community‐acquired pneumonia and inappropriate utilization of antibiotics: side effects of the 4‐h antibiotic administration rule. Chest. 2007;131(6):18651869.
  15. Bates DW, Goldman L, Lee TH. Contaminant blood cultures and resource utilization. The true consequences of false‐positive results. JAMA. 1991;265(3):365369.
  16. Zwang O, Albert RK. Analysis of strategies to improve cost effectiveness of blood cultures. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(5):272276.
  17. Cooper RJ. NHAMCS: does it hold up to scrutiny? Ann Emerg Med. 2012;60(6):722725.
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Journal of Hospital Medicine - 9(8)
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Journal of Hospital Medicine - 9(8)
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