Abstract

We prospectively evaluated pneumococcal and Haemophilus influenzae type b antigen detection in serum and urine of young (3 to 30 months of age) febrile (temperature greater than or equal to 39 degrees C) children at risk for occult bacteremia. Patients with septic shock, meningitis, or epiglottitis were excluded. Of 576 patients, 16 had pneumococcal bacteremia (final diagnoses: primary bacteremia, nine; otitis media, four; pneumonia, two; unknown, one), and five had H influenzae b bacteremia (final diagnoses: primary bacteremia, two; cellulitis, two; arthritis, one). Latex agglutination was positive in all five patients with H influenzae b bacteremia (positive in three of three urine specimens, three of four sera tested) but only one of 16 patients with pneumococcal bacteremia (positive in one of seven urine samples, zero of 13 sera tested). Both assays had specificities of greater than 95%. Nonspecific agglutination occurred in 7% of specimens tested. Enzyme immunoassay for pneumococcal antigen, although more sensitive than latex agglutination, failed to detect antigen in ten sera and three urine specimens from patients with pneumococcal bacteremia. Thus, neither latex agglutination nor enzyme immunoassay was sufficiently sensitive for detection of occult pneumococcal bacteremia. Latex agglutination for H influenzae b holds promise as a sensitive and specific test for rapid diagnosis of occult bacteremia due to H influenzae b.

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