Uppendahl Locke, Chiles Caitlin, Shields Stephanie, Dong Fanglong, Kraft Elizabeth, Duong Jennifer, Delmore James
1 Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health, University of Minnesota , Minneapolis, Minnesota.
2 Department of Family Medicine, University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita , Wichita, Kansas.
Surg Infect (Larchmt). 2018 May/Jun;19(4):397-402. doi: 10.1089/sur.2017.247. Epub 2018 Feb 16.
The purpose of this study was to establish compliance with guidelines published by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) regarding prophylactic antibiotic use in gynecologic surgery at our institution, and define areas of improvement to promote antibiotic stewardship.
This was a retrospective cohort study at a single, large tertiary care and teaching hospital in Kansas. Patients who underwent inpatient or outpatient gynecologic surgery during 2013 were included. Based on published guidelines for prophylactic antibiotic agents for gynecologic surgery by ACOG, procedures were classified as antibiotic-indicated or antibiotic-not-indicated. Chi-square and Fisher exact test analysis were used to identify factors associated with antibiotic use.
Of the 1,735 cases eligible for inclusion, 1,045 (60.2%) had antibiotic agents recommended per guidelines, and appropriate antibiotic agents were given in 1,031 (98.7%) of those cases. In 690 (39.8%) cases, prophylactic antibiotics were either not recommended or the guidelines are not well defined. Of the 690 cases without indication for antibiotic agents, 394 (57.1%) received prophylactic antibiotic agents. Agreement with guidelines varied substantially based on patient age, race, insurance status, area of residence, and if the procedure was a resident case (p < 0.05). Myomectomy, laparoscopy, and ectopic pregnancy procedures received antibiotic agents against recommendations 96.3%, 75.6%, and 45.5% of the time, respectively.
Peri-operative antibiotics are often administered inappropriately to women undergoing gynecologic surgeries for which published guidelines are not well defined. Future studies need to identify strategies to reduce antibiotic use in surgical procedures unlikely to benefit from prophylaxis.
本研究的目的是确定我们机构在妇科手术中预防性使用抗生素方面是否符合美国妇产科医师学会(ACOG)发布的指南,并确定需要改进的领域以促进抗生素管理。
这是一项在堪萨斯州一家大型三级医疗和教学医院进行的回顾性队列研究。纳入了2013年期间接受住院或门诊妇科手术的患者。根据ACOG发布的妇科手术预防性抗生素使用指南,将手术分类为抗生素适应证或非抗生素适应证。采用卡方检验和Fisher精确检验分析来确定与抗生素使用相关的因素。
在1735例符合纳入标准的病例中,1045例(60.2%)根据指南推荐使用了抗生素,其中1031例(98.7%)使用了适当的抗生素。在690例(39.8%)病例中,预防性抗生素要么不被推荐,要么指南定义不明确。在690例无抗生素使用指征的病例中,394例(57.1%)接受了预防性抗生素。根据患者年龄、种族、保险状况、居住地区以及手术是否为住院医师负责的病例,与指南的符合度差异很大(p<0.05)。子宫肌瘤切除术、腹腔镜手术和异位妊娠手术分别有96.3%、75.6%和45.5%的时间违反推荐使用了抗生素。
围手术期抗生素常常不适当地应用于那些指南定义不明确的妇科手术女性患者。未来的研究需要确定策略,以减少在不太可能从预防性使用中获益的手术中抗生素的使用。