Department of General Surgery, University Hospital of Basel, Switzerland.
Swiss Med Wkly. 2012 Sep 4;142:w13616. doi: 10.4414/smw.2012.13616. eCollection 2012.
Surgical site infections (SSI) are the most common hospital-acquired infections among surgical patients, with significant impact on patient morbidity and health care costs. The Basel SSI Cohort Study was performed to evaluate risk factors and validate current preventive measures for SSI. The objective of the present article was to review the main results of this study and its implications for clinical practice and future research.
The prospective observational cohort study included 6,283 consecutive general surgery procedures closely monitored for evidence of SSI up to 1 year after surgery. The dataset was analysed for the influence of various potential SSI risk factors, including timing of surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis (SAP), glove perforation, anaemia, transfusion and tutorial assistance, using multiple logistic regression analyses. In addition, post hoc analyses were performed to assess the economic burden of SSI, the efficiency of the clinical SSI surveillance system, and the spectrum of SSI-causing pathogens.
The overall SSI rate was 4.7% (293/6,283). While SAP was administered in most patients between 44 and 0 minutes before surgical incision, the lowest risk of SSI was recorded when the antibiotics were administered between 74 and 30 minutes before surgery. Glove perforation in the absence of SAP increased the risk of SSI (OR 2.0; CI 1.4-2.8; p <0.001). No significant association was found for anaemia, transfusion and tutorial assistance with the risk of SSI. The mean additional hospital cost in the event of SSI was CHF 19,638 (95% CI, 8,492-30,784). The surgical staff documented only 49% of in-hospital SSI; the infection control team registered the remaining 51%. Staphylococcus aureus was the most common SSI-causing pathogen (29% of all SSI with documented microbiology). No case of an antimicrobial-resistant pathogen was identified in this series.
The Basel SSI Cohort Study suggested that SAP should be administered between 74 and 30 minutes before surgery. Due to the observational nature of these data, corroboration is planned in a randomized controlled trial, which is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation. Routine change of gloves or double gloving is recommended in the absence of SAP. Anaemia, transfusion and tutorial assistance do not increase the risk of SSI. The substantial economic burden of in-hospital SSI has been confirmed. SSI surveillance by the surgical staff detected only half of all in-hospital SSI, which prompted the introduction of an electronic SSI surveillance system at the University Hospital of Basel and the Cantonal Hospital of Aarau. Due to the absence of multiresistant SSI-causing pathogens, the continuous use of single-shot single-drug SAP with cefuroxime (plus metronidazole in colorectal surgery) has been validated.
手术部位感染(SSI)是外科患者中最常见的医院获得性感染,对患者发病率和医疗保健成本有重大影响。巴塞尔 SSI 队列研究旨在评估 SSI 的风险因素并验证当前的预防措施。本文的目的是回顾该研究的主要结果及其对临床实践和未来研究的意义。
巴塞尔 SSI 队列研究方法概述:这项前瞻性观察性队列研究纳入了 6283 例连续接受普外科手术的患者,密切监测术后 1 年内是否发生 SSI。使用多因素逻辑回归分析评估了各种潜在 SSI 风险因素的影响,包括手术预防性抗菌药物使用(SAP)的时机、手套穿孔、贫血、输血和教学辅助,数据集进行了分析。此外,还进行了事后分析,以评估 SSI 的经济负担、临床 SSI 监测系统的效率以及 SSI 致病病原体的范围。
巴塞尔 SSI 队列研究的主要结果回顾:总体 SSI 发生率为 4.7%(293/6283)。虽然大多数患者在手术切口前 44-0 分钟给予 SAP,但在手术前 74-30 分钟给予抗生素时,SSI 的风险最低。无 SAP 时手套穿孔会增加 SSI 的风险(OR 2.0;95%CI 1.4-2.8;p<0.001)。贫血、输血和教学辅助与 SSI 风险无显著相关性。发生 SSI 时,平均额外住院费用为 19638 瑞士法郎(95%CI,8492-30784)。手术人员仅记录了 49%的院内 SSI;感染控制小组记录了其余 51%。金黄色葡萄球菌是最常见的 SSI 致病病原体(所有有微生物学记录的 SSI 中占 29%)。本系列未发现耐抗生素病原体。
巴塞尔 SSI 队列研究表明,SAP 应在手术前 74-30 分钟内给予。由于这些数据的观察性质,计划在瑞士国家科学基金会支持下进行随机对照试验进行证实。建议在无 SAP 时更换手套或双层手套。贫血、输血和教学辅助不会增加 SSI 的风险。院内 SSI 的巨大经济负担已得到证实。手术人员的 SSI 监测仅检测到所有院内 SSI 的一半,这促使巴塞尔大学医院和阿劳州立医院引入了电子 SSI 监测系统。由于缺乏多耐药 SSI 致病病原体,已验证连续使用单次单药 SAP(结直肠手术中加用甲硝唑)。