Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Center for Evidence-Based Practice, University of Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia.
JAMA Surg. 2017 Aug 1;152(8):784-791. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.0904.
The human and financial costs of treating surgical site infections (SSIs) are increasing. The number of surgical procedures performed in the United States continues to rise, and surgical patients are initially seen with increasingly complex comorbidities. It is estimated that approximately half of SSIs are deemed preventable using evidence-based strategies.
To provide new and updated evidence-based recommendations for the prevention of SSI.
A targeted systematic review of the literature was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and the Cochrane Library from 1998 through April 2014. A modified Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach was used to assess the quality of evidence and the strength of the resulting recommendation and to provide explicit links between them. Of 5759 titles and abstracts screened, 896 underwent full-text review by 2 independent reviewers. After exclusions, 170 studies were extracted into evidence tables, appraised, and synthesized.
Before surgery, patients should shower or bathe (full body) with soap (antimicrobial or nonantimicrobial) or an antiseptic agent on at least the night before the operative day. Antimicrobial prophylaxis should be administered only when indicated based on published clinical practice guidelines and timed such that a bactericidal concentration of the agents is established in the serum and tissues when the incision is made. In cesarean section procedures, antimicrobial prophylaxis should be administered before skin incision. Skin preparation in the operating room should be performed using an alcohol-based agent unless contraindicated. For clean and clean-contaminated procedures, additional prophylactic antimicrobial agent doses should not be administered after the surgical incision is closed in the operating room, even in the presence of a drain. Topical antimicrobial agents should not be applied to the surgical incision. During surgery, glycemic control should be implemented using blood glucose target levels less than 200 mg/dL, and normothermia should be maintained in all patients. Increased fraction of inspired oxygen should be administered during surgery and after extubation in the immediate postoperative period for patients with normal pulmonary function undergoing general anesthesia with endotracheal intubation. Transfusion of blood products should not be withheld from surgical patients as a means to prevent SSI.
This guideline is intended to provide new and updated evidence-based recommendations for the prevention of SSI and should be incorporated into comprehensive surgical quality improvement programs to improve patient safety.
治疗手术部位感染(SSI)的人力和财力成本正在增加。在美国进行的手术数量持续上升,而手术患者最初患有越来越复杂的合并症。据估计,大约一半的 SSI 可以通过使用基于证据的策略来预防。
为 SSI 的预防提供新的和更新的基于证据的建议。
对 MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL 和 Cochrane 图书馆从 1998 年到 2014 年 4 月进行了有针对性的系统文献回顾。使用改良的推荐评估、制定和评估(GRADE)方法来评估证据质量和由此产生的建议的强度,并在它们之间建立明确的联系。在筛选了 5759 个标题和摘要后,有 896 个由 2 名独立审查员进行了全文审查。排除后,170 项研究被提取到证据表中进行评估和综合。
手术前,患者应在手术前一天晚上至少用肥皂(抗菌或非抗菌)或防腐剂洗澡或沐浴全身。仅在基于已发表的临床实践指南表明有指征时才给予抗菌预防,并且药物的杀菌浓度应在切口时在血清和组织中建立。在剖宫产手术中,应在皮肤切开前给予抗菌预防。手术室中的皮肤准备应使用含酒精的制剂进行,除非有禁忌症。对于清洁和清洁污染的手术,即使存在引流管,也不应在手术室中关闭手术切口后再给予额外的预防性抗菌药物剂量。不应将局部抗菌剂应用于手术切口。手术期间,应使用血糖目标水平低于 200mg/dL 来实施血糖控制,并在所有患者中保持正常体温。对于接受全身麻醉和气管插管的肺功能正常的患者,在手术中和拔管后应在手术后立即给予较高的吸入氧分数。不应将血液制品的输血从手术患者中扣留作为预防 SSI 的手段。
本指南旨在为 SSI 的预防提供新的和更新的基于证据的建议,并应纳入综合手术质量改进计划以提高患者安全性。