Harris Anthony D, Fleming Brandon, Bromberg Jonathan S, Rock Peter, Nkonge Grace, Emerick Michele, Harris-Williams Michelle, Thom Kerri A
1Department of Epidemiology and Public Health,University of Maryland School of Medicine,Baltimore,Maryland.
2University of Maryland School of Pharmacy,Baltimore,Maryland.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2015 Apr;36(4):417-23. doi: 10.1017/ice.2014.77.
To identify factors associated with the development of surgical site infection (SSI) among adult patients undergoing renal transplantation
A retrospective cohort study.
An urban tertiary care center in Baltimore, Maryland, with a well-established renal transplantation program that performs ~200-250 renal transplant procedures annually.
At total of 441 adult patients underwent renal transplantation between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2011. Of these 441 patients, 66 (15%) developed an SSI; of these 66, 31 (47%) were superficial incisional infections and 35 (53%) were deep-incisional or organ-space infections. The average body mass index (BMI) among this patient cohort was 29.7; 84 (42%) were obese (BMI >30). Patients who developed an SSI had a greater mean BMI (31.7 vs 29.4; P=.004) and were more likely to have a history of peripheral vascular disease, rheumatologic disease, and narcotic abuse. History of cerebral vascular disease was protective. Multivariate analysis showed BMI (odds ratio [OR] 1.06; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.02-1.11) and past history of narcotic use/abuse (OR, 4.86; 95% CI, 1.24-19.12) to be significantly associated with development of SSI after controlling for National Healthcare Surveillance Network (NHSN) score and presence of cerebrovascular, peripheral vascular, and rheumatologic disease.
We identified higher BMI as a risk factor for the development of SSI following renal transplantation. Notably, neither aggregate comorbidity scores nor NHSN risk index were associated with SSI in this population. Additional risk adjustment measures and research in this area are needed to compare SSIs across transplant centers.
确定成年肾移植患者手术部位感染(SSI)发生的相关因素
一项回顾性队列研究。
马里兰州巴尔的摩市的一家城市三级医疗中心,该中心有成熟的肾移植项目,每年进行约200 - 250例肾移植手术。
2010年1月1日至2011年12月31日期间,共有441例成年患者接受了肾移植手术。在这441例患者中,66例(15%)发生了SSI;在这66例患者中,31例(47%)为浅表切口感染,35例(53%)为深部切口或器官腔隙感染。该患者队列的平均体重指数(BMI)为29.7;84例(42%)为肥胖患者(BMI >30)。发生SSI的患者平均BMI更高(31.7对29.4;P = 0.004),且更有可能有外周血管疾病、风湿性疾病和药物滥用史。脑血管疾病史具有保护作用。多因素分析显示,在控制了国家医疗保健监测网络(NHSN)评分以及脑血管、外周血管和风湿性疾病的存在情况后,BMI(比值比[OR] 1.06;95%置信区间[CI],1.02 - 1.11)和既往药物使用/滥用史(OR,4.86;95% CI,1.24 - 19.12)与SSI的发生显著相关。
我们确定较高的BMI是肾移植后发生SSI的一个危险因素。值得注意的是,在该人群中,合并症总分和NHSN风险指数均与SSI无关。需要在该领域采取额外的风险调整措施并开展研究,以便在各移植中心之间比较SSI情况。