Walz J Matthias, Paterson Craig A, Seligowski Jeanne M, Heard Stephen O
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center, Worcester 01536, USA.
Arch Surg. 2006 Oct;141(10):1014-8; discussion 1018. doi: 10.1001/archsurg.141.10.1014.
We sought to determine whether the administration of preoperative antibiotics, intraoperative transfusion of blood products, and intraoperative hypothermia has any impact on the incidence of postoperative surgical site infections (SSIs) in a heterogeneous patient population undergoing bowel surgery.
Retrospective analysis.
From September through December 2002, data on 1472 patients undergoing bowel surgery at 31 academic medical centers in the United States were collected.
Patients were included in the analysis if they were older than 17 years of age and underwent any surgery involving the small bowel, colon, or rectum. Main Outcome Measure Postoperative SSI. Variables that might affect the risk for developing SSIs were analyzed using multivariate logistic regression analysis.
Perioperative transfusion (P = .04; odds ratio, 1.64), and the presence of any infection at the time of surgery (P = .05; odds ratio, 2.46) were independent risk factors for SSI. Patients with a lower intraoperative temperature nadir had a lower risk for SSI (P = .05; odds ratio, 1.33), although this difference is not clinically significant (35.8 degrees C +/- 0.8 degrees C vs 36.0 degrees C +/- 0.9 degrees C, P<.05). There was a trend toward statistical significance for wound class when added to the multivariate model (P = .09; odds ratio, 1.41). The administration of antibiotics within 120 minutes prior to incision or within 120 minutes prior to and 120 minutes after incision had no effect on SSIs in this patient population.
This study validates perioperative transfusion as an independent risk factor for SSI. The lack of effectiveness of perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis is surprising because it is discordant with the previous literature, and this finding needs further evaluation.
我们试图确定术前使用抗生素、术中输注血制品以及术中体温过低是否会对接受肠道手术的异质性患者群体术后手术部位感染(SSI)的发生率产生影响。
回顾性分析。
2002年9月至12月,收集了美国31家学术医疗中心1472例接受肠道手术患者的数据。
年龄大于17岁且接受任何涉及小肠、结肠或直肠手术的患者纳入分析。主要观察指标为术后SSI。使用多因素逻辑回归分析来分析可能影响发生SSI风险的变量。
围手术期输血(P = 0.04;比值比,1.64)以及手术时存在任何感染(P = 0.05;比值比,2.46)是SSI的独立危险因素。术中最低体温较低的患者发生SSI的风险较低(P = 0.05;比值比,1.33),尽管这种差异在临床上并不显著(35.8℃±0.8℃对36.0℃±0.9℃,P<0.05)。当将伤口类别添加到多变量模型中时,有统计学意义的趋势(P = 0.09;比值比,1.41)。在切口前120分钟内或切口前120分钟及切口后120分钟内使用抗生素对该患者群体的SSI没有影响。
本研究证实围手术期输血是SSI的独立危险因素。围手术期抗生素预防缺乏有效性令人惊讶,因为这与先前的文献不一致,这一发现需要进一步评估。