Mioton Lauren M, Jordan Sumanas W, Hanwright Philip J, Bilimoria Karl Y, Kim John Ys
Department of Plastic Surgery, Vanderbilt School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USA.
Arch Plast Surg. 2013 Sep;40(5):522-9. doi: 10.5999/aps.2013.40.5.522. Epub 2013 Sep 13.
Despite advances in surgical techniques, sterile protocols, and perioperative antibiotic regimens, surgical site infections (SSIs) remain a significant problem. We investigated the relationship between wound classification (i.e., clean, clean/contaminated, contaminated, dirty) and SSI rates in plastic surgery.
We performed a retrospective review of a multi-institutional, surgical outcomes database for all patients undergoing plastic surgery procedures from 2006-2010. Patient demographics, wound classification, and 30-day outcomes were recorded and analyzed by multivariate logistic regression.
A total of 15,289 plastic surgery cases were analyzed. The overall SSI rate was 3.00%, with superficial SSIs occurring at comparable rates across wound classes. There were similar rates of deep SSIs in the clean and clean/contaminated groups (0.64%), while rates reached over 2% in contaminated and dirty cases. Organ/space SSIs occurred in less than 1% of each wound classification. Contaminated and dirty cases were at an increased risk for deep SSIs (odds ratios, 2.81 and 2.74, respectively); however, wound classification did not appear to be a significant predictor of superficial or organ/space SSIs. Clean/contaminated, contaminated, and dirty cases were at increased risk for a postoperative complication, and contaminated and dirty cases also had higher odds of reoperation and 30-day mortality.
Analyzing a multi-center database, we found that wound classification was a significant predictor of overall complications, reoperation, and mortality, but not an adequate predictor of surgical site infections. When comparing infections for a given wound classification, plastic surgery had lower overall rates than the surgical population at large.
尽管手术技术、无菌操作规范及围手术期抗生素治疗方案有所进步,但手术部位感染(SSI)仍是一个重大问题。我们研究了整形外科中伤口分类(即清洁、清洁-污染、污染、污秽)与SSI发生率之间的关系。
我们对一个多机构手术结果数据库进行了回顾性分析,纳入了2006年至2010年接受整形手术的所有患者。记录患者人口统计学资料、伤口分类及30天结局,并通过多因素逻辑回归进行分析。
共分析了15289例整形手术病例。总体SSI发生率为3.00%,各伤口分类中浅表SSI发生率相近。清洁组和清洁-污染组深部SSI发生率相似(0.64%),而污染和污秽病例中该发生率超过2%。各伤口分类中器官/腔隙SSI发生率均低于1%。污染和污秽病例发生深部SSI的风险增加(优势比分别为2.81和2.74);然而,伤口分类似乎并非浅表或器官/腔隙SSI的显著预测因素。清洁-污染、污染和污秽病例发生术后并发症的风险增加,污染和污秽病例再次手术及30天死亡率的优势比也更高。
通过分析多中心数据库,我们发现伤口分类是总体并发症、再次手术和死亡率的显著预测因素,但并非手术部位感染的充分预测因素。在比较特定伤口分类的感染情况时,整形外科的总体发生率低于整个外科手术人群。