Tehran Heart Center, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Cardiac Primary Prevention Research Center, Cardiovascular Diseases Research Institute, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Surg Infect (Larchmt). 2024 Jun;25(5):362-369. doi: 10.1089/sur.2023.369. Epub 2024 May 3.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has brought about drastic hygienic measures, one upside of which might be the mitigated occurrence of surgical site infection (SSI). This study investigated the association of the pandemic with SSI occurrence after cardiac surgeries. From 2014 to 2022, patients undergoing cardiac surgery were included and categorized into pre-pandemic and during-pandemic groups. Surgical site infections were classified into harvest-site, superficial sternal, and complex sternal infection. Multiple logistic regression and inverse probability weighting assessed the association of the pandemic with SSI. Among a total of 26,143 patients, 793 SSIs occurred. The during-pandemic patients were younger (61.87 ± 10.58 vs. 65.64 ± 11.82) with a higher male proportion (70.1% vs. 67.4%) and a higher prevalence of all studied comorbidities/risk factors (expect cigarette smoking). Total SSI rate decreased substantially from 3.3% before COVID-19 to 1.8% afterward (p < 0.001). Inverse probability weights analyses evinced an independent association of the pandemic with a reduced risk of total (adjusted odds ratio [OR]; 0.59; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.45-0.78), harvest-site (adjusted OR, 0.36; 95% CI, 0.19-0.70), and superficial sternal infection (adjusted OR, 0.60; 95% CI, 0.43-0.81). No significant association was observed with complex sternal site infection (adjusted OR, 1.05; 95% CI, 0.55-2.01). Multivariable regression recapitulated these findings. The COVID-19 pandemic independently pertained to more than a 40% reduction in SSI occurrence, particularly affecting harvest-site and superficial sternal infections. However, there remains the possibility of the implications of other known and unknown confounders on the observed association. To some extent, the decrease in SSIs after the pandemic can be justified by reinforced hygienic precautions, emphasizing the necessity of extending the adherence to these measurements into the post-COVID-19 era to maintain the status quo.
2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行带来了严格的卫生措施,其中一个好处可能是手术部位感染(SSI)的发生有所减轻。本研究调查了大流行与心脏手术后 SSI 发生之间的关联。
2014 年至 2022 年,纳入接受心脏手术的患者,并分为大流行前组和大流行期间组。手术部位感染分为采集部位、浅表胸骨和复杂胸骨感染。多变量逻辑回归和逆概率加权评估了大流行与 SSI 的关联。
在总共 26143 名患者中,发生了 793 例 SSI。大流行期间的患者更年轻(61.87±10.58 岁 vs. 65.64±11.82 岁),男性比例更高(70.1% vs. 67.4%),所有研究的合并症/危险因素的患病率更高(除吸烟外)。总 SSI 率从 COVID-19 前的 3.3%大幅下降至之后的 1.8%(p<0.001)。逆概率权重分析表明,大流行与总 SSI(调整后的优势比[OR];0.59;95%置信区间[CI],0.45-0.78)、采集部位(调整后的 OR,0.36;95%CI,0.19-0.70)和浅表胸骨感染(调整后的 OR,0.60;95%CI,0.43-0.81)的风险降低独立相关。复杂胸骨部位感染无显著相关性(调整后的 OR,1.05;95%CI,0.55-2.01)。多变量回归重现了这些发现。COVID-19 大流行独立地与 SSI 发生率降低 40%以上有关,特别是影响采集部位和浅表胸骨感染。然而,其他已知和未知混杂因素对观察到的关联仍存在影响的可能性。在某种程度上,大流行后 SSI 减少可以通过加强卫生预防措施来解释,强调在 COVID-19 后时代继续遵守这些措施以维持现状的必要性。