Background: Peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPCs) rather than bone marrow are used increasingly to provide hematologic reconstitution when transfused after marrow-ablative chemotherapy. PBPCs often are collected via central venous catheters that have remained in place for long periods of time and that may become infected.
Study design and methods: The investigators reviewed their 5-year experience in collecting PBPCs for the prevalence of bacterial contamination. Except for cotrimoxazole therapy given to prevent Pneumocystis cariini pneumonia, patients were not given antibiotic prophylaxis.
Results: Each patient underwent a median of 7 (range, 2-21) PBPC collections; 0.2 percent (3/1040 collections) were culture positive for bacteria (two collections contained coagulase-negative staphylococci and one contained Serratia marcescens). All culture-positive collections were discarded; no PBPCs were culture positive at the time of thawing and transfusion.
Conclusion: This contamination rate is below that previously reported for bone marrow harvests and platelet concentrate collections. Obtaining PBPCs through large-bore central venous catheters has not added to the risk of infection in transplant patients. A program of screening in vitro cultures and strict adherence to sterility techniques can result in very low microbiologic contamination and thus obviates the need for prophylactic antimicrobials in the PBPCs and in the patient.