PEDIATRICS Vol. 101 No. 3 March 1998, p. e4
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
Blood Cultures in the Evaluation of Children With Cellulitis
Received Jul 21, 1997; accepted Nov 17, 1997.

From the Departments of * Pediatrics and
Emergency Medicine,
George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences and
Children's Hospital, Washington, DC.
Objective. To evaluate the yield of blood cultures obtained from immunocompetent children admitted for cellulitis in the post-Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) vaccine era and to determine whether these cultures are cost-effective.
Design. Retrospective case series.
Setting. Urban pediatric emergency department.
Study Population. Patients 2 days to 22 years of age admitted with cellulitis from 1994 through 1995.
Measurements and Results. Of 381 patients identified, 266 (70%) had blood cultures and 243 of these children were enrolled. Data
recorded include demographics, immunization status, initial clinical
appearance, antibiotic pretreatment, preexisting illness, location and
precipitating cause of cellulitis, white blood cell count, and
band-to-neutrophil ratio (BNR). Blood cultures were categorized as
positive, negative, or contaminant. Five cultures (2%) were positive,
and 13 (5.4%) were contaminants. The positive blood cultures grew
streptococcus and staphylococcus organisms, and none of the children
were bacteremic with H influenzae. All patients with group
A
-hemolytic streptococcus had active varicella. The mean age was
lower (26 vs 75 months) in those with a positive blood culture, and
mean BNR was higher (0.32 vs 0.07). Patient management did not change
for bacteremic patients with uncomplicated cellulitis. All repeat
cultures were negative. The cumulative charge for all blood cultures
was $50 986.
Conclusions. Blood cultures are not cost-effective and are more frequently contaminated than positive in the evaluation of a patient with uncomplicated cellulitis. Since introduction of the H influenzae type b vaccine, the most common organisms are streptococci. Using a BNR = 0.20 as a threshold for sending blood cultures, we would have missed one positive culture, but would have avoided blood cultures in 213 patients (88%) with an estimated savings of $42 850.
Key words: cellulitis, bacteremia, health care costs.




