Xie Lunli, Zhu Jun, Luo Shunhong, Xie Yu, Pu Dan
The Minimally Invasive Department of Orthopedics, Rehabilitation Medical Center, The First Peoples's Hospital of Huaihua (Jishou University of the Fourth Affiliated Hospital), Huaihua, China.
The Research Center of Translational Medicine, Jishou University School of Medicine, Jishou, China.
Asian Spine J. 2018 Feb;12(1):162-170. doi: 10.4184/asj.2018.12.1.162. Epub 2018 Feb 7.
We analyzed dose-dependent effects of vancomycin on wound infection bacteria and investigated the relationship between dose and microbial imbalances in patients treated with intrawound vancomycin powder during spine surgery. Numerous trials have confirmed that using intrawound vancomycin powder during spine surgery may decrease postoperative wound infection rates. However, potential risks include changes in wound infection bacteria, inhibition of bone fusion, and systemic toxicity. We searched PubMed for articles published since October 2016 with the following terms: "local vancomycin" or "intrawound vancomycin" or "intraoperative vancomycin" or "intrawound vancomycin" or "topical vancomycin" and "spinal surgery" or "spine surgery." We also screened the reference lists of included articles for additional studies and extracted data related to dose, infecting bacteria, sample size, infection rate and types, location of spine surgery, and perioperative antibiotics used. Our review includes one prospective and nine retrospective studies. Overall, 1 or 2 g local vancomycin powder was used in 2,394 patients. Gram-negative bacteria were dominant in patients in whom 1 g vancomycin powder was used, whereas gram-positive bacteria were dominant in those in whom 2 g powder was used. The exact mechanism underlying this dose-dependent trend remains unclear, although it may be attributed to the pharmacological characteristics of vancomycin. The included studies showed that trends in infection bacteria may change after the use of topical vancomycin powder. In addition, the observed increase in gram-negative bacteria when intrawound vancomycin powder is used has generated considerable attention. The present results differ from previous results but do not provide additional information regarding vancomycin dose and microbial changes in infected wounds. Additional large randomized controlled trials are needed to determine the relationship between vancomycin dose and the types of wound infection bacteria in patients treated with intrawound vancomycin powder during spine surgery.
我们分析了万古霉素对伤口感染细菌的剂量依赖性影响,并研究了脊柱手术期间使用伤口内万古霉素粉末治疗的患者中剂量与微生物失衡之间的关系。大量试验证实,脊柱手术期间使用伤口内万古霉素粉末可能会降低术后伤口感染率。然而,潜在风险包括伤口感染细菌的变化、骨融合的抑制和全身毒性。我们在PubMed上搜索了自2016年10月以来发表的文章,搜索词如下:“局部万古霉素”或“伤口内万古霉素”或“术中万古霉素”或“伤口内万古霉素”或“局部用万古霉素”以及“脊柱手术”。我们还筛选了纳入文章的参考文献列表以寻找其他研究,并提取了与剂量、感染细菌、样本量、感染率和类型、脊柱手术部位以及围手术期使用的抗生素相关的数据。我们的综述包括一项前瞻性研究和九项回顾性研究。总体而言,2394例患者使用了1或2克局部万古霉素粉末。使用1克万古霉素粉末的患者中革兰氏阴性菌占主导,而使用2克粉末的患者中革兰氏阳性菌占主导。尽管这可能归因于万古霉素的药理学特性,但这种剂量依赖性趋势的确切机制仍不清楚。纳入的研究表明,使用局部万古霉素粉末后感染细菌的趋势可能会发生变化。此外,使用伤口内万古霉素粉末时观察到的革兰氏阴性菌增加引起了相当大的关注。目前的结果与先前的结果不同,但并未提供关于万古霉素剂量与感染伤口中微生物变化之间关系的更多信息。需要更多大型随机对照试验来确定脊柱手术期间使用伤口内万古霉素粉末治疗的患者中万古霉素剂量与伤口感染细菌类型之间的关系。