Mohamed Rizvi Zafar, Palasanthiran Pamela, Wu Camille, Mostaghim Mona, McMullan Brendan
University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Sydney Children's Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
J Paediatr Child Health. 2020 Jan;56(1):34-40. doi: 10.1111/jpc.14484. Epub 2019 Apr 29.
Surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis (SAP) is an important measure to reduce post-operative infections. Guidelines exist, but their efficacy and performance in children is poorly understood compared with adults. To review adherence to SAP guidelines, this study assesses risk factors for non-adherence and rate of early post-surgical infections.
A retrospective cohort study of paediatric surgical cases (0-<18 years) at a tertiary children's hospital was performed. Patient characteristics, surgical factors and antimicrobial details were evaluated against hospital guidelines for overall adherence and domains of: antimicrobial choice, dose, re-dosing, timing and duration. Multiple regression analysis was used to determine risk factors for non-adherence. Hospital records were reviewed for post-operative infections at 7 and 30 days.
Among 326 cases, overall guideline adherence was 39.6% but varied by domain and surgical subspecialty. Incorrect wound classification was associated with overall non-adherence on multivariate regression (odds ratio (OR): 2.59; P < 0.001). Incorrect antimicrobial choice was more likely in children with penicillin hypersensitivity (OR 138.34, P = 0.004) and incorrect dosing more likely in adolescent patients (OR 4.33; P = 0.004). Presence of invasive devices was associated with prolonged duration of antimicrobials (OR 2.92, P = 0.016). Only two post-operative infections were documented by 30 days, but data were insufficient to exclude mild infections managed in the community.
SAP was suboptimal in children, with areas for improvement including better guidance on wound classification, allergy management and care for adolescent patients. Documented infections were rare, but mild infections were unable to be excluded due to limited post-discharge information.
外科手术抗菌预防(SAP)是减少术后感染的一项重要措施。虽然有相关指南,但与成人相比,其在儿童中的疗效和实施情况仍知之甚少。为了评估对SAP指南的依从性,本研究评估了不依从的风险因素以及术后早期感染率。
对一家三级儿童医院的儿科手术病例(0至<18岁)进行回顾性队列研究。根据医院指南,对患者特征、手术因素和抗菌药物细节进行评估,以确定总体依从性以及抗菌药物选择、剂量、再次给药、给药时间和持续时间等方面的依从情况。采用多元回归分析确定不依从的风险因素。查阅医院记录,了解术后7天和30天的感染情况。
在326例病例中,总体指南依从率为39.6%,但不同领域和外科亚专业的依从率有所不同。在多因素回归分析中,伤口分类错误与总体不依从相关(比值比(OR):2.59;P<0.001)。青霉素过敏的儿童更有可能出现抗菌药物选择错误(OR 138.34,P = 0.004),青少年患者更有可能出现剂量错误(OR 4.33;P = 0.004)。存在侵入性装置与抗菌药物使用时间延长相关(OR 2.92,P = 0.016)。30天时仅记录到两例术后感染,但数据不足以排除在社区处理的轻度感染。
儿童的SAP情况欠佳,需要改进的方面包括对伤口分类、过敏管理和青少年患者护理提供更好的指导。记录在案的感染很少见,但由于出院后信息有限,无法排除轻度感染。