Time to positivity for differentiating blood culture contamination: A 20-hour cutoff for major contaminants

ElsevierVolume 113, Issue 4, December 2025, 117030Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious DiseaseAuthor links open overlay panel, , , , , , , , Highlights•

Time to positivity aids in distinguishing contamination in blood cultures.

The 24-hour time to positivity is generally applied as an indicator of contamination.

This cutoff may have shortened due to advances in blood culture systems.

A 20-hour time to positivity was estimated as the optimal cutoff for major contaminants.

Subgroup analysis of coagulase-negative staphylococci showed consistent results.

AbstractBackground

Blood culture remains the gold standard for diagnosing bacteremia; however, contamination inevitably occurs in 2-3% of cases, requiring differentiation between true bacteremia and contamination. Although time to positivity (TTP) aids in this clinical decision, with detection after 24 hours generally indicating contamination, technological advances in blood culture systems may have shortened this threshold interval.

Methods

This study retrospectively analyzed blood culture data in our hospital from April 2023 to January 2025 to determine the optimal TTP cutoff. Patients with positive blood cultures for major contaminating bacteria were included. Cases were classified as true bacteremia or contamination based on a comprehensive chart review conducted by the antimicrobial stewardship audit, and TTP was compared between the groups. Sensitivity, specificity, and Youden index at various TTP cutoffs were utilized to determine the optimal threshold using the receiver operating characteristic curve analysis.

Results

Seventy-one patients were enrolled, with 34 cases classified as true bacteremia and 37 as contamination. Identified bacteria included coagulase-negative staphylococci (70.4%), viridans group streptococci (18.3%), and others (11.3%). The median TTP was significantly shorter in the true bacteremia group compared with the contamination group (18.6 vs.25.8 hours, p < 0.001). In the contamination group, 43.2% of the cases demonstrated positive growth within 24 hours. Based on sensitivity, specificity, and Youden index, the optimal threshold was estimated to be 20 hours. A subgroup analysis of the CNS-only cohort yielded concordant results.

Conclusion

This study suggests that a 20-hour TTP threshold could help effectively differentiate true bacteremia from contamination in current clinical settings.

Keywords

Bacteremia

Blood stream infection

Contamination

Incubation time

Time to positivity

© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc.

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