Cunningham M, Bunn F, Handscomb K
Mount Vernon Hospital, Lymphoedema Clinic, Room 4, Main Outpatients, Mount Vernon Hospital, Northwood, Middlesex, UK, HP6 2RN.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006 Apr 19(2):CD005360. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD005360.pub2.
Surgery has been used as part of breast cancer treatment for centuries; however any surgical procedure has the potential risk of infection. Infection rates for surgical treatment of breast cancer are documented at between three and 15%, higher than average for a clean surgical procedure. Pre and peri-operative antibiotics have been found to be useful in lowering infection rates in other surgical groups, yet there is no current consensus on prophylactic antibiotic use in breast cancer surgery.
To determine the effects of prophylactic antibiotics on the incidence of surgical site infection after breast cancer surgery.
We searched the Cochrane Wounds and Breast Cancer Groups Specialised Registers, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) issue 1 2006. MEDLINE 2002-2005, EMBASE 1980-2005, NRR issue 1 2005, CINAHL 1982-2004 and SIGLE 1976-2004. Companies and experts in the field were contacted and reference lists were checked. No language restrictions were applied.
Randomised controlled trials of pre and peri-operative antibiotics for patients undergoing surgery for breast cancer were included. Primary outcomes were, incidence of breast wound infection and adverse reactions to treatment.
Two authors independently examined the title and abstracts of all studies identified by the search strategy, then assessed study quality and extracted data from those that met the inclusion criteria.
Six studies met the inclusion criteria. All six evaluated pre-operative antibiotic compared with no antibiotic or placebo. Pooling of the results demonstrated that prophylactic antibiotics significantly reduce the incidence of surgical site infection for patients undergoing breast cancer surgery without reconstruction (pooled RR 0.66, 95% CI, 0.48 to 0.89). No studies presented separate data for patients who underwent reconstructive surgery at the time of removal of the breast tumour.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Prophylactic antibiotics reduce the risk of surgical site infection in patients undergoing surgery for breast cancer. The potential morbidity caused by infection, such as delays in wound healing or adjuvant cancer treatments must be balanced against the cost of treatment and potential adverse effects such as drug reactions or increased bacterial resistance. Further studies of patients undergoing immediate breast reconstruction would be useful as studies have identified this group as being at higher risk of infection than those who do not undergo immediate breast reconstruction.
几个世纪以来,手术一直是乳腺癌治疗的一部分;然而,任何外科手术都有感染的潜在风险。乳腺癌手术治疗的感染率据记载在3%至15%之间,高于清洁外科手术的平均感染率。已发现术前和围手术期使用抗生素有助于降低其他外科手术组的感染率,但目前对于乳腺癌手术中预防性使用抗生素尚无共识。
确定预防性使用抗生素对乳腺癌手术后手术部位感染发生率的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane伤口与乳腺癌专业组专门登记册、Cochrane对照试验中心登记册(CENTRAL)2006年第1期。检索了MEDLINE 2002 - 2005年、EMBASE 1980 - 2005年、NRR 2005年第1期、CINAHL 1982 - 2004年以及SIGLE 1976 - 2004年的文献。联系了该领域的公司和专家并检查了参考文献列表。未设语言限制。
纳入针对接受乳腺癌手术患者的术前和围手术期使用抗生素的随机对照试验。主要结局为乳腺伤口感染发生率和治疗不良反应。
两位作者独立审查了检索策略所确定的所有研究的标题和摘要,然后评估研究质量并从符合纳入标准的研究中提取数据。
六项研究符合纳入标准。所有六项研究均将术前使用抗生素与不使用抗生素或使用安慰剂进行了比较。结果汇总表明,预防性使用抗生素可显著降低未进行乳房重建的乳腺癌手术患者的手术部位感染发生率(合并相对危险度0.66,95%可信区间,0.48至0.89)。没有研究提供在切除乳腺肿瘤时同时进行重建手术患者的单独数据。
预防性使用抗生素可降低乳腺癌手术患者手术部位感染的风险。必须将感染所导致的潜在发病率,如伤口愈合延迟或辅助性癌症治疗延迟,与治疗成本以及潜在不良反应,如药物反应或细菌耐药性增加相权衡。对于即刻进行乳房重建的患者进行进一步研究将很有帮助,因为研究已确定该组患者比未进行即刻乳房重建的患者感染风险更高。