Chlorhexidine Compared with Povidone-Iodine as Skin Preparation before Blood Culture

Abstract
Chlorhexidine is better than povidone-iodine for care of catheter sites, but it is not known whether chlorhexidine is superior in reducing blood culture contamination. To determine whether alcoholic chlorhexidine is a more effective skin antiseptic for collection of blood cultures than aqueous povidone-iodine. Randomized, controlled trial. Three adult intensive care units in a French university hospital. 403 adults who had at least one blood culture drawn through a peripheral vein. Patients were randomly assigned to receive skin preparation with an aqueous solution of 10% povidone-iodine or an alcoholic solution of 0.5% chlorhexidine before phlebotomy. Contamination rates of blood cultures. Of 2041 blood cultures collected in 403 patients, 124 yielded pathogens. Chlorhexidine reduced the incidence of blood culture contamination more than povidone-iodine (14 of 1019 cultures [1.4%] compared with 34 of 1022 cultures [3.3%]; odds ratio, 0.40 [95% CI, 0.21 to 0.75]; P = 0.004). Skin preparation with alcoholic chlorhexidine is more efficacious than skin preparation with aqueous povidone-iodine in reducing contamination of blood cultures.