Department of Orthopaedics, Saiseikai Shiga Hospital, Ohashi 2-4-1, Ritto, Shiga, 520-3046, Japan.
Department of Mathematics and Statistics in Medical Sciences, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Shimogamo Hangi-tyo Sakyo-ku 1-5, Kyoto, 606-0823, Japan.
J Orthop Surg Res. 2023 Sep 19;18(1):700. doi: 10.1186/s13018-023-04204-7.
Postoperative surgical site infections (SSIs) are an important complication to prevent in surgical treatment. Patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) have a higher risk of SSIs. Preoperative glycemic control is required. For patients with orthopedic trauma, the duration of preoperative glycemic control is limited because delaying operative treatment is difficult. However, whether preoperative glycemic control would decrease the risk of SSIs in diabetic patients with lower extremity fractures is unclear. The first aim of this study was to investigate the rate of SSIs among patients with DM who had undergone preoperative glycemic control, compared with that of patients without DM. As the secondary aim, we sought to demonstrate among patients with DM whether preoperative glycemic control would affect the development of SSIs between patients with controlled DM and patients with poorly controlled DM.
In this retrospective cohort study, 1510 patients treated surgically for lower extremity fractures were enrolled. Data collected were patient age, sex, body mass index, history of DM, development of SSIs, tobacco use, the presence of an open fracture, the period between the day of injury and the operation, the length of surgery, and blood glucose levels on admission and on the day before surgery.
The rate of total SSIs was 6.0% among patients with DM and 4.4% among patients without DM (p = 0.31). Multivariate logistic regression revealed a significant association between the development of SSIs and the presence of DM (odds ratio, 1.79; 95% confidence interval 1.01-3.19; p = 0.047). The results of the secondary study revealed that the rate of early SSIs was significantly higher in the poorly controlled DM group than in the controlled DM group (5.9% vs. 1.5%; p = 0.032). However, multivariate logistic regression revealed that control levels of DM were not significantly associated with the development of SSIs.
Even though patients with DM had undergone preoperative glycemic control, SSIs were significantly associated with DM, especially when the patients had poorly controlled DM. This finding suggested that continuous glycemic control is important preoperatively and postoperatively to prevent SSIs.
术后手术部位感染(SSI)是外科治疗中需要预防的重要并发症。糖尿病(DM)患者发生 SSI 的风险更高。需要进行术前血糖控制。对于骨科创伤患者,由于难以延迟手术治疗,因此术前血糖控制的持续时间有限。然而,对于下肢骨折的糖尿病患者,术前血糖控制是否会降低 SSI 的风险尚不清楚。本研究的首要目的是比较接受术前血糖控制的 DM 患者与非 DM 患者的 SSI 发生率。其次,我们旨在证明在 DM 患者中,术前血糖控制是否会影响血糖控制良好的患者和血糖控制不佳的患者 SSI 的发生。
在这项回顾性队列研究中,共纳入了 1510 例接受下肢骨折手术治疗的患者。收集的数据包括患者年龄、性别、体重指数、DM 病史、SSI 发生情况、吸烟情况、开放性骨折、从受伤日到手术的时间间隔、手术持续时间以及入院时和术前一天的血糖水平。
DM 患者的总 SSI 发生率为 6.0%,非 DM 患者的 SSI 发生率为 4.4%(p=0.31)。多变量逻辑回归显示,SSI 的发生与 DM 之间存在显著关联(优势比,1.79;95%置信区间,1.01-3.19;p=0.047)。次要研究结果显示,血糖控制不佳的 DM 组早期 SSI 的发生率明显高于血糖控制良好的 DM 组(5.9%比 1.5%;p=0.032)。然而,多变量逻辑回归显示,DM 的控制水平与 SSI 的发生无显著相关性。
即使 DM 患者接受了术前血糖控制,SSI 仍与 DM 显著相关,尤其是当患者的 DM 控制不佳时。这一发现表明,术前和术后持续的血糖控制对于预防 SSI 非常重要。