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报告全髋关节和膝关节置换术后手术部位感染:将监测限制在手术医院的影响。

Reporting surgical site infections following total hip and knee arthroplasty: impact of limiting surveillance to the operative hospital.

机构信息

Infectious Diseases Division, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

出版信息

Clin Infect Dis. 2013 Nov;57(9):1282-8. doi: 10.1093/cid/cit516. Epub 2013 Aug 2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Public reporting of surgical site infections (SSIs) by hospitals is largely limited to infections detected during surgical hospitalizations or readmissions to the same facility. SSI rates may be underestimated if patients with SSIs are readmitted to other hospitals. We assessed the impact of readmissions to other facilities on hospitals' SSI rates following primary total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA).

METHODS

This was a retrospective cohort study of all patients who underwent primary THA or TKA at California hospitals between 1 January 2006 and 31 December 2009. SSIs were identified using ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes predictive of SSI assigned at any California hospital within 365 days of surgery using a statewide repository of hospital data that allowed tracking of patients between facilities. We used statewide data to estimate the fraction of each hospital's THA and TKA SSIs identified at the operative hospital versus other hospitals.

RESULTS

A total of 91 121 THA and 121 640 TKA procedures were identified. Based on diagnosis codes, SSIs developed following 2214 (2.3%) THAs and 2465 (2.0%) TKAs. Seventeen percent of SSIs would have been missed by operative hospital surveillance alone. The proportion of hospitals' SSIs detected at nonoperative hospitals ranged from 0% to 100%. Including SSIs detected at nonoperative hospitals resulted in better relative ranking for 61% of THA hospitals and 61% of TKA hospitals.

CONCLUSIONS

Limiting SSI surveillance to the operative hospital caused varying degrees of SSI underestimation and substantially impacted hospitals' relative rankings, suggesting that alternative methods for comprehensive postdischarge surveillance are needed for accurate benchmarking.

摘要

背景

医院对手术部位感染(SSI)的公开报告主要限于在手术住院期间或同一机构再次入院时发现的感染。如果 SSI 患者被转至其他医院,SSI 发生率可能会被低估。我们评估了其他医疗机构的再入院对初次全髋关节置换术(THA)或全膝关节置换术(TKA)后医院 SSI 发生率的影响。

方法

这是一项回顾性队列研究,纳入了 2006 年 1 月 1 日至 2009 年 12 月 31 日期间在加利福尼亚州医院接受初次 THA 或 TKA 的所有患者。使用加利福尼亚州医院数据的全州存储库,根据任何加利福尼亚州医院在手术 365 天内使用的预测 SSI 的 ICD-9-CM 诊断代码,识别 SSI。该存储库允许在医疗机构之间跟踪患者。我们使用全州数据估计每家医院在手术医院和其他医院识别的 THA 和 TKA SSI 比例。

结果

共确定了 91121 例 THA 和 121640 例 TKA 手术。根据诊断代码,2214 例(2.3%)THA 和 2465 例(2.0%)TKA 术后发生 SSI。单独通过手术医院监测,将有 17%的 SSI 被遗漏。非手术医院发现的 SSI 比例在 0%至 100%之间。包括非手术医院发现的 SSI 后,61%的 THA 医院和 61%的 TKA 医院的相对排名得到了改善。

结论

将 SSI 监测仅限于手术医院会导致不同程度的 SSI 低估,并极大地影响医院的相对排名,这表明需要替代方法进行全面的出院后监测,以实现准确的基准比较。

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