Keske Şiran, Altunok Elif Sargın, Azak Emel, Gülten Ezgi, Gülen Tuğba Arslan, Hatipoğlu Çiğdem Ataman, Asan Ali, Korkmaz Derya, Kaçmaz Bahar, Kızmaz Yeşim, Batırel Ayşe, Akgül Fethiye, Yapar Derya, Karakoç Zehra Çağla, Özel Ayşe Serra, Yalçın Tuğba Yanık, Özer Deniz, Korkmaz Özge Eren, Şahin Ahmet, Karaşın Muhammed Fatih, Turunç Tuba, Aydın Mehtap, Demirtürk Neşe, Azap Alpay, Ergönül Önder
Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology, Koç University School of Medicine, Davutpaşa Cd. No: 4, Zeytinburnu/Istanbul, 34010, Türkiye.
Koç University İşBank Center for Infectious Diseases, Istanbul, Türkiye.
Antimicrob Resist Infect Control. 2025 Jul 1;14(1):77. doi: 10.1186/s13756-025-01542-5.
Surgical site infections (SSIs) are among the most significant concerns in healthcare settings, presenting challenges in patient management and healthcare outcomes. The emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic has further complicated the landscape of infectious disease epidemiology, impacting the distribution and resistance characteristics of pathogens responsible for SSIs. Understanding these dynamics is essential for improving infection prevention and treatment strategies.
This retrospective multi-center study included 17 hospitals in Turkey, analyzing SSI cases from January 2019 to January 2023. The study was divided into three phases: pre-pandemic (January 2019 - March 2020), early pandemic (March 2020 - January 2022), and late pandemic (January 2022 - January 2023). We assessed demographic and clinical characteristics, pathogen distributions, and resistance rates, focusing on multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens.
A total of 2,058 patients with SSIs were included. The SSI rate increased from 0.79% in 2019 to 0.87% in 2020, then decreased to 0.46% in 2021 and 0.50% in 2022. The most prevalent pathogens were E. coli (21.9%) and K. pneumoniae (14.6%). Resistance to meropenem in K. pneumoniae rose from 23% pre-pandemic to 33% post-pandemic, while ceftazidime-avibactam resistance surged from 6 to 43%. P. aeruginosa showed increased quinolone resistance from 18 to 27%, with colistin resistance rising to 13% in the late pandemic phase.
This study highlights the significant impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on SSIs in Turkey, revealing concerning trends in antibiotic resistance among key pathogens. Ongoing surveillance and enhanced infection control measures are essential to address these challenges and improve patient outcomes in the post-pandemic era.
手术部位感染(SSIs)是医疗机构中最受关注的问题之一,给患者管理和医疗结果带来挑战。新冠疫情的出现使传染病流行病学格局更加复杂,影响了导致手术部位感染的病原体的分布和耐药特性。了解这些动态对于改进感染预防和治疗策略至关重要。
这项回顾性多中心研究纳入了土耳其的17家医院,分析了2019年1月至2023年1月的手术部位感染病例。该研究分为三个阶段:疫情前(2019年1月至2020年3月)、疫情早期(2020年3月至2022年1月)和疫情后期(2022年1月至2023年1月)。我们评估了人口统计学和临床特征、病原体分布以及耐药率,重点关注多重耐药(MDR)病原体。
共纳入2058例手术部位感染患者。手术部位感染率从2019年的0.79%上升至2020年的0.87%,随后在2021年降至0.46%,2022年降至0.50%。最常见的病原体是大肠杆菌(21.9%)和肺炎克雷伯菌(14.6%)。肺炎克雷伯菌对美罗培南的耐药率从疫情前的23%升至疫情后的33%,而对头孢他啶-阿维巴坦的耐药率从6%激增至43%。铜绿假单胞菌对喹诺酮类药物的耐药率从18%升至27%,在疫情后期阶段对黏菌素的耐药率升至13%。
本研究突出了新冠疫情对土耳其手术部位感染的重大影响,揭示了关键病原体抗生素耐药性的令人担忧的趋势。持续监测和加强感染控制措施对于应对这些挑战以及改善疫情后时代的患者结局至关重要。