Richter Vered, Cohen Matan J, Benenson Shmuel, Almogy Gideon, Brezis Mayer
Center for Clinical Quality and Safety, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, POB 12000, 91120, Jerusalem, Israel.
Department of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel.
World J Surg. 2017 Aug;41(8):1935-1942. doi: 10.1007/s00268-017-3974-y.
Availability of surgical site infection (SSI) surveillance rates challenges clinicians, healthcare administrators and leaders and the public. The purpose of this report is to demonstrate the consequences patient self-assessment strategies have on SSI reporting rates.
We performed SSI surveillance among patients undergoing general surgery procedures, including telephone follow-up 30 days after surgery. Additionally we undertook a separate validation study in which we compared patient self-assessments of SSI with surgeon assessment. Finally, we performed a meta-analysis of similar validation studies of patient self-assessment strategies.
There were 22/266 in-hospital SSIs diagnosed (8.3%), and additional 16 cases were detected through the 30-day follow-up. In total, the SSI rate was 16.8% (95% CI 10.1-18.5). In the validation survey, we found patient telephone surveillance to have a sensitivity of 66% (95% CI 40-93%) and a specificity of 90% (95% CI 86-94%). The meta-analysis included five additional studies. The overall sensitivity was 83.3% (95% CI 79-88%), and the overall specificity was 97.4% (95% CI 97-98%). Simulation of the meta-analysis results divulged that when the true infection rate is 1%, reported rates would be 4%; a true rate of 50%, the reported rates would be 43%.
Patient self-assessment strategies in order to fulfill 30-day SSI surveillance misestimate SSI rates and lead to an erroneous overall appreciation of inter-institutional variation. Self-assessment strategies overestimate SSIs rate of institutions with high-quality performance and underestimate rates of poor performance. We propose such strategies be abandoned. Alternative strategies of patient follow-up strategies should be evaluated in order to provide valid and reliable information regarding institutional performance in preventing patient harm.
手术部位感染(SSI)监测率的获取对临床医生、医疗保健管理人员、领导者及公众构成挑战。本报告旨在说明患者自我评估策略对SSI报告率的影响。
我们对接受普通外科手术的患者进行了SSI监测,包括术后30天的电话随访。此外,我们还进行了一项单独的验证研究,比较了患者对SSI的自我评估与外科医生的评估。最后,我们对患者自我评估策略的类似验证研究进行了荟萃分析。
266例住院患者中有22例被诊断为医院内SSI(8.3%),通过30天随访又发现了16例。总体而言,SSI率为16.8%(95%可信区间10.1 - 18.5)。在验证调查中,我们发现患者电话监测的敏感性为66%(95%可信区间40 - 93%),特异性为90%(95%可信区间86 - 94%)。荟萃分析还纳入了另外五项研究。总体敏感性为83.3%(95%可信区间79 - 88%),总体特异性为97.4%(95%可信区间97 - 98%)。对荟萃分析结果的模拟显示,当真实感染率为1%时,报告率将为4%;真实率为50%时,报告率将为43%。
为完成30天SSI监测而采用的患者自我评估策略会错误估计SSI率,并导致对机构间差异的错误总体认识。自我评估策略高估了表现良好机构的SSI率,而低估了表现较差机构的SSI率。我们建议放弃此类策略。应评估患者随访策略的替代方案,以便提供有关机构在预防患者伤害方面表现的有效且可靠信息。