Ryan Sheila L, Sen Anish, Staggers Kristen, Luerssen Thomas G, Jea Andrew
Neuro-Spine Program, Division of Pediatric Neurosurgery, Texas Children's Hospital, Department of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2014 Sep;14(3):259-65. doi: 10.3171/2014.5.PEDS1448. Epub 2014 Jun 27.
Quality improvement methods are being implemented in various areas of medicine. In an effort to reduce the complex (instrumented) spine infection rate in pediatric patients, a standardized protocol was developed and implemented at an institution with a high case volume of instrumented spine fusion procedures in the pediatric age group.
Members of the Texas Children's Hospital Spine Study Group developed the protocol incrementally by using the current literature and prior institutional experience until consensus was obtained. The protocol was prospectively applied to all children undergoing complex spine surgery starting August 21, 2012. Acute infections were defined as positive wound cultures within 12 weeks of surgery, defined in alignment with current hospital infection control criteria. Procedures and infections were measured before and after protocol implementation. This protocol received full review and approval of the Baylor College of Medicine institutional review board.
Nine spine surgeons performed 267 procedures between August 21, 2012, and September 30, 2013. The minimum follow-up was 12 weeks. The annual institutional infection rate prior to the protocol (2007-2011) ranged from 3.4% to 8.9%, with an average of 5.8%. After introducing the protocol, the infection rate decreased to 2.2% (6 infections of 267 cases) (p = 0.0362; absolute risk reduction 3.6%; relative risk 0.41 [95% CI 0.18-0.94]). Overall compliance with data form completion was 63.7%. In 4 of the 6 cases of infection, noncompliance with completion of the data collection form was documented; moreover, 2 of the 4 spine surgeons whose patients experienced infections had the lowest compliance rates in the study group.
The standardized protocol for complex spine surgery significantly reduced surgical site infection at the authors' institution. The overall compliance with entry into the protocol was good. Identification of factors associated with post-spine surgery wound infection will allow further protocol refinement in the future.
质量改进方法正在医学各个领域实施。为努力降低儿科患者复杂(器械辅助)脊柱感染率,在一家儿科年龄组器械辅助脊柱融合手术病例数量众多的机构制定并实施了一项标准化方案。
德克萨斯儿童医院脊柱研究小组的成员利用当前文献和既往机构经验逐步制定该方案,直至达成共识。该方案自2012年8月21日起前瞻性应用于所有接受复杂脊柱手术的儿童。急性感染定义为术后12周内伤口培养阳性,这与当前医院感染控制标准一致。在方案实施前后对手术和感染情况进行了测量。该方案获得了贝勒医学院机构审查委员会的全面审查和批准。
2012年8月21日至2013年9月30日期间,9名脊柱外科医生实施了267例手术。最短随访时间为12周。该方案实施前(2007 - 2011年)机构年感染率在3.4%至8.9%之间,平均为5.8%。引入该方案后,感染率降至2.2%(267例中有6例感染)(p = 0.0362;绝对风险降低3.6%;相对风险0.41 [95% CI 0.18 - 0.94])。数据表单填写的总体依从率为63.7%。在6例感染病例中的4例中,记录有未遵守数据收集表单填写的情况;此外,其患者发生感染的4名脊柱外科医生中有2名在研究组中的依从率最低。
复杂脊柱手术的标准化方案显著降低了作者所在机构的手术部位感染率。方案录入的总体依从性良好。识别与脊柱手术后伤口感染相关的因素将有助于未来进一步完善该方案。