van der Merwe M, Rooks K, Crawford H, Frampton C M A, Boyle M J
Department of Paediatric Orthopaedics, Starship Children's Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand.
Department of Medicine, The University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand.
J Child Orthop. 2019 Feb 1;13(1):114-119. doi: 10.1302/1863-2548.13.180077.
To assess the influence of antibiotic timing on surgical culture yield in paediatric patients with haematogenous osteoarticular infection.
All patients aged 0 to 15 years admitted to a National Children's Hospital with the diagnosis of acute, haematogenous, osteoarticular infection (osteomyelitis and/or septic arthritis) between June 1997 and December 2016 were retrospectively analyzed. Only patients with positive blood cultures undergoing surgery for culture and debridement were included. Patients were allocated into pre-treatment and post-treatment groups, according to whether they received antibiotics before or after surgical cultures were obtained. Outcomes measured included baseline variables, treatment characteristics and surgical culture yield.
A total of 131 patients were included; 107 patients in the pre-treatment group and 24 patients in the post-treatment group. There was no significant difference with respect to patient age (p = 0.870), white blood cell count (p = 0.197), ethnicity (p = 0.203) or infection multi-focality (p = 0.883) between the two groups.The administration of systemic antibiotics prior to obtaining surgical cultures had no clinically significant effect on surgical culture yield (rate of positive surgical cultures, 85% (pre-treatment) 54.2% (post-treatment); p = 0.002). Within the pre-treatment group, there was no significant difference in duration of pre-surgical antibiotic treatment between patients who had positive or negative surgical cultures (mean duration, 45.9 hours (positive cultures) 47.9 hours (negative cultures); p = 0.743).
In paediatric patients with acute, haematogenous, osteoarticular infection, antibiotic administration before surgery does not decrease surgical culture yield. Our results suggest that paediatric patients presenting with suspected osteoarticular infection should receive appropriate systemic antibiotics promptly after blood cultures are obtained.
Level III - retrospective case-control study.
评估抗生素使用时机对血源性骨关节炎感染患儿手术培养结果的影响。
对1997年6月至2016年12月期间入住一家国家儿童医院、诊断为急性血源性骨关节炎感染(骨髓炎和/或化脓性关节炎)的所有0至15岁患者进行回顾性分析。仅纳入血培养阳性且接受手术进行培养和清创的患者。根据患者在获得手术培养物之前或之后是否接受抗生素治疗,将患者分为治疗前组和治疗后组。测量的结果包括基线变量、治疗特征和手术培养结果。
共纳入131例患者;治疗前组107例患者,治疗后组24例患者。两组在患者年龄(p = 0.870)、白细胞计数(p = 0.197)、种族(p = 0.203)或感染多灶性(p = 0.883)方面无显著差异。在获得手术培养物之前给予全身抗生素对手术培养结果无临床显著影响(手术培养阳性率,治疗前组为85%,治疗后组为54.2%;p = 0.002)。在治疗前组中,手术培养阳性或阴性的患者术前抗生素治疗持续时间无显著差异(平均持续时间,培养阳性患者为45.9小时,培养阴性患者为47.9小时;p = 0.743)。
在患有急性血源性骨关节炎感染的儿科患者中,术前使用抗生素不会降低手术培养结果。我们的结果表明,疑似骨关节炎感染的儿科患者在获得血培养后应立即接受适当的全身抗生素治疗。
三级——回顾性病例对照研究。