Farrell John J, Hicks Jennifer L, Wallace Stephanie E, Seftel Allen D
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Illinois College of Medicine; Department of Laboratory Medicine, Division of Clinical Microbiology & Serology, OSF/Saint Francis Medical Center.
Department of Urology, OSF/Saint Francis Medical Center, Peoria, IL.
Res Rep Urol. 2017 Feb 24;9:37-41. doi: 10.2147/RRU.S117206. eCollection 2017.
With the universal adoption of antibiotic prophylaxis prior to prostate biopsy, the current risk of post-biopsy infection (including sepsis) is <2%. Preoperative prophylactic antibiotic regimens can vary, and although fluoroquinolones have emerged as the standard of care, there is no universally agreed upon preoperative antibiotic regimen. Recently, an increase in the proportion of postoperative infections caused by fluoroquinolone-resistant (as well as other ) has led to the exploration of simple, practical, and cost-effective methods to minimize this postoperative infection risk. We performed a prospective, nonrandomized, controlled study of preoperative rectal cultures to screen for rectal colonization with fluoroquinolone-resistant bacteria using ciprofloxacin-supplemented MacConkey agar culture media. To evaluate the feasibility and practicality of this test, one provider used the results of rectal swab cultures collected during the preoperative outpatient evaluation to adjust each patient's preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis when fluoroquinolone-resistant enteric bacteria were detected, whereas two other providers continued usual preoperative care and empiric antimicrobial prophylaxis. Rectal colonization with fluoroquinolone-resistant bacteria was detected in 19/152 (12.5%) of patients. In our intention-to-treat analysis (N=268), the rate of post-biopsy sepsis was 3.6% lower in the group that was screened for rectal colonization with fluoroquinolone-resistant bacteria prior to transrectal prostate biopsy. The observed risk reduction in the rectal screening group trended toward, but did not achieve, statistical significance. We suggest that preoperative screening for rectal colonization with fluoroquinolone-resistant enteric bacteria may be a useful step toward mitigating post-prostate biopsy sepsis.
随着前列腺活检前普遍采用抗生素预防措施,目前活检后感染(包括败血症)的风险<2%。术前预防性抗生素方案可能有所不同,尽管氟喹诺酮类药物已成为标准治疗方法,但尚无普遍认可的术前抗生素方案。最近,由耐氟喹诺酮类(以及其他)细菌引起的术后感染比例有所增加,这促使人们探索简单、实用且经济高效的方法来将这种术后感染风险降至最低。我们进行了一项前瞻性、非随机对照研究,使用添加环丙沙星的麦康凯琼脂培养基对术前直肠培养物进行检测,以筛查耐氟喹诺酮类细菌的直肠定植情况。为了评估该检测的可行性和实用性,一名医疗人员在术前门诊评估期间收集直肠拭子培养结果,当检测到耐氟喹诺酮类肠道细菌时,调整每位患者的术前抗生素预防措施,而另外两名医疗人员则继续常规术前护理和经验性抗菌预防。在152例患者中的19例(12.5%)检测到耐氟喹诺酮类细菌的直肠定植。在我们的意向性分析(N = 268)中,在经直肠前列腺活检前筛查耐氟喹诺酮类细菌直肠定植的组中,活检后败血症的发生率低3.6%。直肠筛查组观察到的风险降低虽有趋势但未达到统计学显著性。我们建议,术前筛查耐氟喹诺酮类肠道细菌的直肠定植可能是减轻前列腺活检后败血症的有用步骤。