Department of Surgery, University Medical Center Utrecht, Heidelberglaan 100, 3584 CX Utrecht, The Netherlands.
World J Emerg Surg. 2020 Jan 8;15:4. doi: 10.1186/s13017-019-0286-6. eCollection 2020.
Although the phrase "time is fascia" is well acknowledged in the case of necrotizing soft tissue infections (NSTIs), solid evidence is lacking. The aim of this study is to review the current literature concerning the timing of surgery in relation to mortality and amputation in patients with NSTIs.
A systematic search in PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and the Cochrane Controlled Register of Trials (CENTRAL) was performed. The primary outcomes were mortality and amputation. These outcomes were related to the following time-related variables: (1) time from onset symptoms to presentation; (2) time from onset symptoms to surgery; (3) time from presentation to surgery; (4) duration of the initial surgical procedure. For the meta-analysis, the effects were estimated using random-effects meta-analysis models.
A total of 109 studies, with combined 6051 NSTI patients, were included. Of these 6051 NSTI patients, 1277 patients died (21.1%). A total of 33 studies, with combined 2123 NSTI patients, were included for quantitative analysis. Mortality was significantly lower for patients with surgery within 6 h after presentation compared to when treatment was delayed more than 6 h (OR 0.43; 95% CI 0.26-0.70; 10 studies included). Surgical treatment within 6 h resulted in a 19% mortality rate compared to 32% when surgical treatment was delayed over 6 h. Also, surgery within 12 h reduced the mortality compared to surgery after 12 h from presentation (OR 0.41; 95% CI 0.27-0.61; 16 studies included). Patient delay (time from onset of symptoms to presentation or surgery) did not significantly affect the mortality in this study. None of the time-related variables assessed significantly reduced the amputation rate. Three studies reported on the duration of the first surgery. They reported a mean operating time of 78, 81, and 102 min with associated mortality rates of 4, 11.4, and 60%, respectively.
Average mortality rates reported remained constant (around 20%) over the past 20 years. Early surgical debridement lowers the mortality rate for NSTI with almost 50%. Thus, a sense of urgency is essential in the treatment of NSTI.
虽然“时间就是筋膜”这句话在坏死性软组织感染(NSTI)的情况下已被广泛认可,但缺乏确凿的证据。本研究旨在回顾有关 NSTI 患者手术时机与死亡率和截肢率的现有文献。
对 PubMed/MEDLINE、Embase、护理与联合健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)和 Cochrane 对照试验注册中心(CENTRAL)进行系统检索。主要结局是死亡率和截肢率。这些结局与以下与时间相关的变量有关:(1)从发病症状到就诊的时间;(2)从发病症状到手术的时间;(3)从就诊到手术的时间;(4)初次手术的持续时间。对于荟萃分析,使用随机效应荟萃分析模型估计效果。
共纳入 109 项研究,共计 6051 例 NSTI 患者。在这 6051 例 NSTI 患者中,有 1277 例死亡(21.1%)。共纳入 33 项研究,共计 2123 例 NSTI 患者进行定量分析。与就诊后延迟治疗超过 6 小时相比,就诊后 6 小时内接受手术的患者死亡率显著降低(OR 0.43;95%CI 0.26-0.70;纳入 10 项研究)。手术治疗在 6 小时内的死亡率为 19%,而手术治疗在 6 小时后延迟的死亡率为 32%。此外,与就诊后 12 小时后手术相比,就诊后 12 小时内手术可降低死亡率(OR 0.41;95%CI 0.27-0.61;纳入 16 项研究)。在这项研究中,患者延迟(从发病症状到就诊或手术的时间)并未显著影响死亡率。评估的所有与时间相关的变量均未显著降低截肢率。有 3 项研究报告了首次手术的持续时间。它们报告的平均手术时间分别为 78、81 和 102 分钟,死亡率分别为 4%、11.4%和 60%。
过去 20 年来,报告的平均死亡率保持不变(约 20%)。早期外科清创术可将 NSTI 的死亡率降低近 50%。因此,在治疗 NSTI 时必须要有紧迫感。