Department of Surgery, The University of Missouri - Kansas City School of Medicine, 2301 Holmes Street, MO, 64108, Kansas City, USA.
School of Medicine, The University of Kansas, Kansas City, USA.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2022 Aug 26;23(1):813. doi: 10.1186/s12891-022-05763-2.
The greater likelihood of morbidity, mortality, length of hospital stays and poorer long-term outcomes as a result of surgical site infections secondary to spinal surgery makes prophylactic measures an imperative focus. Therefore, the aim of this review was to evaluate the available research related to the efficacy of different intraoperative irrigation techniques used in spinal surgery for surgical site infection (SSI) prophylaxis.
We performed a comprehensive search using Ovid Medline, EMBASE, Web of Science and the Cochrane library pertaining to this topic. Our meta-analysis was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines. The inclusion criteria consist of spine surgeries with intraoperative use of any wound irrigation technique, comparison groups with a different intraoperative irrigation technique or no irrigation, SSI identified with bacterial cultures or clinically in the postoperative period, reported SSI rates. Data extracted from eligible studies included, but was not limited to, SSI rates, irrigation technique and control technique. Exclusion criteria consist of articles with no human subjects, reviews, meta-analyses and case control studies and no details about SSI identification or rates. Pooled risk ratios were calculated. A meta-analysis was performed with a forest plot to determine risk estimates' heterogeneity with I index, Q-statistic, and p value under a random-effects model. Funnel plot was used to assess publication bias. All databases were last checked on January, 2022. PROBAST tool was used to assess both risk of bias and applicability concerns.
After reviewing 1494 titles and abstracts, 18 articles met inclusion criteria. They included three prospective randomized-controlled trials, 13 retrospective cohort studies, two prospective cohort studies. There were 54 (1.8%) cases of SSIs in the povidone-iodine irrigation group (N = 2944) compared to 159 (4.6%) in the control group (N = 3408). Using intraoperative povidone-iodine wound irrigation produced an absolute risk reduction of 2.8%. Overall risk ratio was 0.32 (95% CI 0.20-0.53, p < 0.00001). In a global analysis, study heterogeneity and synthesizing mostly retrospective data were primary limitations.
The most evidence exists for povidone-iodine and has Level 2 evidence supporting SSI reduction during spinal surgery. Other antiseptic solutions such as dilute chlorhexidine lack published evidence in this patient population which limits the ability to draw conclusions related to its use in spinal surgery.
II - Systematic Review with Meta-Analysis.
由于脊柱手术后的手术部位感染,发病率、死亡率、住院时间延长和预后较差的可能性更大,因此预防措施是当务之急。因此,本研究的目的是评估与脊柱手术中用于预防手术部位感染(SSI)的不同术中冲洗技术相关的现有研究。
我们使用 Ovid Medline、EMBASE、Web of Science 和 Cochrane 图书馆进行了全面搜索。我们的荟萃分析根据 PRISMA 指南进行。纳入标准包括使用任何伤口冲洗技术的脊柱手术、比较组使用不同的术中冲洗技术或不冲洗、细菌培养或术后临床确定的 SSI、报告的 SSI 率。从合格研究中提取的数据包括但不限于 SSI 率、冲洗技术和对照技术。排除标准包括无人体研究、综述、meta 分析和病例对照研究以及无 SSI 鉴定或率的详细信息。计算了汇总风险比。使用森林图进行荟萃分析,以确定 I 指数、Q 统计量和 p 值下随机效应模型的风险估计异质性。漏斗图用于评估发表偏倚。所有数据库均于 2022 年 1 月最后一次检查。使用 PROBAST 工具评估偏倚风险和适用性问题。
在审查了 1494 篇标题和摘要后,有 18 篇文章符合纳入标准。它们包括三项前瞻性随机对照试验、十三项回顾性队列研究、两项前瞻性队列研究。在聚维酮碘冲洗组(N=2944)中,有 54 例(1.8%)发生 SSI,而对照组(N=3408)中,有 159 例(4.6%)发生 SSI。术中使用聚维酮碘伤口冲洗可使绝对风险降低 2.8%。总体风险比为 0.32(95%CI 0.20-0.53,p<0.00001)。在全球分析中,研究异质性和主要回顾性数据综合是主要限制。
最有证据的是聚维酮碘,有 2 级证据支持脊柱手术中减少 SSI。其他抗菌溶液,如稀氯己定,在该患者人群中缺乏发表证据,这限制了对其在脊柱手术中使用的相关结论的推断。
II-系统评价与荟萃分析。