Department of Wound Healing and Dermatology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Surg Infect (Larchmt). 2011 Dec;12(6):469-74. doi: 10.1089/sur.2011.045. Epub 2011 Dec 5.
Surgical site infection (SSI) is the fourth commonest healthcare-associated infection and complicates at least 5% of open operations. In a randomized clinical trial, antimicrobial-coated sutures were compared with their conventional counterparts, polyglactin and poliglecaprone, for skin closure after breast cancer surgery to assess their role in reducing the rate of SSI.
Between November 2008 and February 2011, 150 female patients presenting with breast cancer to a single center were randomized to skin closure with antimicrobial-coated or plain sutures. Postoperatively, SSI was defined using the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) definitions and scored using the ASEPSIS or Southampton systems by trained, blinded observers with close post-discharge surveillance and patient diaries. Surgeons and patients were blinded to the type of suture used.
Using CDC criteria, the overall rate of SSI was 18.9% at six weeks. Six patients (4.7%) needed intervention or readmission for SSI. Skin closure with antimicrobial sutures showed a non-statistically significant reduction in the SSI rate, to 15.2%, compared with conventional sutures (22.9%). A uniform tendency for fewer SSIs in the antimicrobial-coated suture group was found using ASEPSIS and Southampton scores, but again, the difference was not statistically significant.
The previously reported high rate of SSI related to breast surgery was confirmed. Using statistical modeling and earlier reports, the study was powered to show a difference using ASEPSIS scores, but the modification used in this trial failed to find a difference. Finding a statistically significant difference would have needed two to three times the number of patients recruited. Further evaluation of antimicrobial-coated sutures is merited, particularly if used as part of a care bundle to reduce SSI after breast cancer surgery.
手术部位感染(SSI)是第四种常见的医院获得性感染,至少会使 5%的开放性手术复杂化。在一项随机临床试验中,抗菌涂层缝线与传统缝线(聚乳酸和聚己内酯)在乳腺癌手术后进行皮肤缝合,以评估其在降低 SSI 发生率方面的作用。
2008 年 11 月至 2011 年 2 月,在一家单一中心就诊的 150 名女性乳腺癌患者被随机分为抗菌涂层缝线或普通缝线缝合皮肤。术后,采用美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)的定义来定义 SSI,并由经过培训的、盲法观察者使用 ASEPSIS 或南安普顿评分系统进行评分,对患者进行密切的出院后监测和日记记录。外科医生和患者对缝线类型均不知情。
使用 CDC 标准,6 周时的 SSI 总发生率为 18.9%。有 6 名患者(4.7%)因 SSI 而需要干预或再次入院。与普通缝线(22.9%)相比,抗菌缝线缝合的 SSI 发生率有统计学意义的降低,为 15.2%。使用 ASEPSIS 和南安普顿评分系统,发现抗菌涂层缝线组的 SSI 发生率呈均匀减少趋势,但差异无统计学意义。
先前报道的乳腺癌手术相关 SSI 发生率较高得到了证实。通过统计学建模和早期报告,该研究有能力使用 ASEPSIS 评分显示差异,但本试验中使用的改良方法未能发现差异。要发现统计学上的显著差异,需要招募两倍或三倍的患者。抗菌涂层缝线值得进一步评估,特别是如果将其作为减少乳腺癌手术后 SSI 的护理包的一部分使用。