Korol Ellen, Johnston Karissa, Waser Nathalie, Sifakis Frangiscos, Jafri Hasan S, Lo Mathew, Kyaw Moe H
Oxford Outcomes, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
MedImmune, Gaithersburg, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Dec 18;8(12):e83743. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083743. eCollection 2013.
Surgical site infection (SSI) complicates 2-5% of surgeries in the United States. Severity of SSI ranges from superficial skin infection to life-threatening conditions such as severe sepsis, and SSIs are responsible for increased morbidity, mortality, and economic burden associated with surgery. Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) is a commonly-isolated organism for SSI, and methicillin-resistant S. aureus SSI incidence is increasing globally.
The objective of this systematic review was to characterize risk factors for SSI within observational studies describing incidence of SSI in a real-world setting.
An initial search identified 328 titles published in 2002-2012; 57 were identified as relevant for data extraction. Extracted information included study design and methodology, reported cumulative incidence and post-surgical time until onset of SSI, and odds ratios and associated variability for all factors considered in univariate and/or multivariable analyses.
Median SSI incidence was 3.7%, ranging from 0.1% to 50.4%. Incidence of overall SSI and S. aureus SSI were both highest in tumor-related and transplant surgeries. Median time until SSI onset was 17.0 days, with longer time-to-onset for orthopedic and transplant surgeries. Risk factors consistently identified as associated with SSI included co-morbidities, advanced age, risk indices, patient frailty, and surgery complexity. Thirteen studies considered diabetes as a risk factor in multivariable analysis; 85% found a significant association with SSI, with odds ratios ranging from 1.5-24.3. Longer surgeries were associated with increased SSI risk, with a median odds ratio of 2.3 across 11 studies reporting significant results.
In a broad review of published literature, risk factors for SSI were characterized as describing reduced fitness, patient frailty, surgery duration, and complexity. Recognition of risk factors frequently associated with SSI allows for identification of such patients with the greatest need for optimal preventive measures to be identified and pre-treatment prior to surgery.
在美国,手术部位感染(SSI)使2%至5%的手术出现并发症。SSI的严重程度从浅表皮肤感染到严重脓毒症等危及生命的情况不等,并且SSI导致与手术相关的发病率、死亡率和经济负担增加。金黄色葡萄球菌(金葡菌)是SSI中常见的分离菌,耐甲氧西林金葡菌引起的SSI发病率在全球范围内呈上升趋势。
本系统评价的目的是在描述实际环境中SSI发病率的观察性研究中,确定SSI的危险因素。
初步检索共识别出2002年至2012年发表的328篇文献标题;其中57篇被确定与数据提取相关。提取的信息包括研究设计和方法、报告的累积发病率和直至SSI发病的术后时间,以及单变量和/或多变量分析中考虑的所有因素的比值比及相关变异性。
SSI的中位发病率为3.7%,范围从0.1%至50.4%。总体SSI和金葡菌引起的SSI发病率在肿瘤相关手术和移植手术中均最高。直至SSI发病的中位时间为17.0天,骨科手术和移植手术的发病时间更长。一直被确定与SSI相关的危险因素包括合并症、高龄、风险指数、患者虚弱和手术复杂性。13项研究在多变量分析中将糖尿病视为危险因素;85%的研究发现糖尿病与SSI存在显著关联,比值比范围为1.5至24.3。手术时间越长,SSI风险越高,在11项报告有显著结果的研究中,中位比值比为2.3。
在对已发表文献的广泛综述中,SSI的危险因素被确定为反映身体状况不佳、患者虚弱、手术持续时间和复杂性。认识到经常与SSI相关的危险因素有助于识别最需要采取最佳预防措施的患者,并在手术前进行预处理。