Groenen Hannah, Jalalzadeh Hasti, Bontekoning Nathan, Bediako-Bowan Antoinette A A, Buis Dennis R, Dreissen Yasmine E M, Eskes Anne M, Goosen Jon H M, Gray Mingyang L, Griekspoor Mitchel, Hollenbeck Brian L, IJpma Frank F A, van der Laan Maarten J, Labi Appiah-Korang, Mathijssen Nina M C, Miles Brett A, Mølbak Kåre, Orsini Ricardo G, Prakken Frederik J, Schaad Roald R, Segers Patrique, Stauning Marius A, van der Zwet Wil C, de Jonge Stijn W, Wolfhagen Niels, Hannink Gerjon, Boermeester Marja A
Department of Surgery, Amsterdam UMC location University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology and Metabolism, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
BJS Open. 2025 May 7;9(3). doi: 10.1093/bjsopen/zraf044.
The effect of door openings in the operating room on surgical site infections remains a controversial topic and has led to strict door-opening policies. The aim of this individual-patient data meta-analysis was to evaluate the effect of the number of door openings in the operating room on surgical site infection.
MEDLINE (PubMed) and Embase (Ovid) were searched up to 2 December 2024. Authors with individual-patient data on surgical site infections and door openings were invited to collaborate. A one-stage individual-patient data meta-analysis accounting for heterogeneity was performed to examine effects overall and in subgroup analyses (wound class, implant surgery, and income level). The primary outcome was surgical site infection. The risk of bias and Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation framework were used to determine the certainty of evidence.
Individual-patient data from 8 observational studies, encompassing 4412 patients, revealed a 6.0% incidence of surgical site infection. Each extra door opening per hour was associated with increased risk of surgical site infection (odds ratio 1.012, 95% c.i. 1.005 to 1.019; τ2 = 0.095; very low certainty of evidence). This means that, for example, at a baseline infection risk of 2%, approximately 35 additional door openings per hour per surgery would be needed to cause one additional surgical site infection per 100 patients. In subgroup analyses, no differences in effect were found. The cumulative effect was more pronounced in patients with a high baseline risk of surgical site infection.
Very low certainty of evidence suggests a marginal increase in the risk of surgical site infection for each additional door opening per hour. Although the relative effect is minimal, the cumulative effect has an impact on patients with a higher baseline surgical site infection risk more than others. However, the certainty of the available evidence is too low and the relative effect on clinical outcomes too small to support a rigorous zero door-openings policy to reduce rates of surgical site infections.
手术室门开启对手术部位感染的影响仍是一个有争议的话题,并导致了严格的开门政策。这项个体患者数据荟萃分析的目的是评估手术室门开启次数对手术部位感染的影响。
检索截至2024年12月2日的MEDLINE(PubMed)和Embase(Ovid)。邀请拥有手术部位感染和门开启个体患者数据的作者进行合作。进行了一项考虑异质性的单阶段个体患者数据荟萃分析,以检查总体影响和亚组分析(伤口类别、植入手术和收入水平)中的影响。主要结局是手术部位感染。使用偏倚风险和推荐分级、评估、制定与评价框架来确定证据的确定性。
来自8项观察性研究的个体患者数据,涵盖4412名患者,显示手术部位感染发生率为6.0%。每小时额外增加一次门开启与手术部位感染风险增加相关(比值比1.012,95%置信区间1.005至1.019;τ2 = 0.095;证据确定性非常低)。这意味着,例如,在基线感染风险为2%时,每台手术每小时大约需要额外增加35次门开启,才能导致每100名患者中多出现一例手术部位感染。在亚组分析中,未发现影响存在差异。累积效应在手术部位感染基线风险高的患者中更为明显。
证据确定性非常低表明,每小时额外增加一次门开启,手术部位感染风险略有增加。虽然相对影响很小,但累积效应对基线手术部位感染风险较高的患者影响比对其他患者更大。然而,现有证据的确定性过低,对临床结局的相对影响过小,无法支持严格的零开门政策以降低手术部位感染率。