Gupta Rohan, Holden Matthew
Neurosurgery, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, GBR.
Public Health, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, GBR.
Cureus. 2025 May 1;17(5):e83307. doi: 10.7759/cureus.83307. eCollection 2025 May.
Surgical site infections (SSIs) are a potential complication that can occur after spinal surgery and significantly impact patients' well-being and healthcare systems. Topical vancomycin has become an attractive low-cost intervention to prevent SSIs in spinal surgery. However, in current literature, the efficacy of topical vancomycin in preventing SSIs is a well-debated topic with conflicting views. The primary objective of this review was to analyze relevant studies to evaluate whether vancomycin powder is an effective intervention in preventing SSIs following spinal surgery. A widespread electronic literature search was performed using three primary databases: Medline, Embase, and Web of Science. Relevant studies were screened using pre-defined inclusion and exclusion criteria focusing on outcomes of postoperative SSI incidence rates. Eligible articles should have set control groups of patients receiving only standard systemic antibiotics and treatment groups receiving topical vancomycin plus systemic prophylaxis. Data were extracted from included studies, and quality assessment was done, including the risk of bias. After full-text evaluation, 12 studies were included in this review, with a total of 9,224 patients. Three were randomized controlled trials (RCTs), two were prospective cohort, and seven were retrospective cohort studies. A total of 279 patients developed SSIs, with 194 SSIs in the control groups. Five studies demonstrated a statistically significant decrease in SSI rates with the application of vancomycin powder. Three studies showed a statistically insignificant reduction in SSI rates between vancomycin and control groups, but one presented a statistically significant decrease after propensity score matching of patients. The final four studies showed no statistically significant difference in SSI rates between both study arms. Therefore, seven studies supported the beneficial use of vancomycin powder in preventing SSIs following spinal surgery, while the other five studies had opposing views. Risk of bias was common throughout the studies, including confounding factors, selection and performance biases, and bias due to incomplete data. Overall, these findings signify the necessity of further well-designed RCTs with double blinding to confirm the effectiveness of topical vancomycin in preventing SSIs during spinal surgery. Clinicians may consider the application of vancomycin powder with caution and on a case-to-case basis.
手术部位感染(SSIs)是脊柱手术后可能出现的一种并发症,会对患者的健康和医疗系统产生重大影响。局部应用万古霉素已成为脊柱手术中预防手术部位感染的一种有吸引力的低成本干预措施。然而,在当前的文献中,局部应用万古霉素预防手术部位感染的疗效是一个备受争议的话题,观点相互矛盾。本综述的主要目的是分析相关研究,以评估万古霉素粉末在预防脊柱手术后手术部位感染方面是否为有效干预措施。使用三个主要数据库进行了广泛的电子文献检索:Medline、Embase和科学网。根据预先定义的纳入和排除标准,以术后手术部位感染发生率为重点对相关研究进行筛选。符合条件的文章应设有仅接受标准全身抗生素治疗的对照组和接受局部万古霉素加全身预防治疗的治疗组。从纳入研究中提取数据,并进行质量评估,包括偏倚风险评估。经过全文评估,本综述纳入了12项研究,共9224例患者。其中三项为随机对照试验(RCT),两项为前瞻性队列研究,七项为回顾性队列研究。共有279例患者发生手术部位感染,对照组有194例。五项研究表明,应用万古霉素粉末后手术部位感染率有统计学意义的下降。三项研究显示,万古霉素组与对照组之间手术部位感染率的降低无统计学意义,但有一项研究在对患者进行倾向得分匹配后显示有统计学意义的下降。最后四项研究表明,两个研究组之间手术部位感染率无统计学意义的差异。因此,七项研究支持在脊柱手术后使用万古霉素粉末预防手术部位感染有益,而其他五项研究则持相反观点。在整个研究中,偏倚风险普遍存在,包括混杂因素、选择和实施偏倚以及数据不完整导致的偏倚。总体而言,这些发现表明有必要进一步开展设计良好的双盲随机对照试验,以确认局部应用万古霉素在脊柱手术中预防手术部位感染的有效性。临床医生在使用万古霉素粉末时应谨慎并根据具体情况考虑。