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Infections and Colon Surgery: Preliminary Results from a Surveillance Program in an Italian Hospital.

Authors :
Ripabelli G
Salzo A
Sammarco ML
Guerrizio G
Cecere G
Tamburro M
Source :
Hospital topics [Hosp Top] 2023 Jan-Mar; Vol. 101 (1), pp. 27-38. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Nov 25.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Surgical site infections (SSIs) represent a valid indicator of the healthcare quality. This study described the preliminary results of one-year active surveillance program on colon surgeries in a hospital in Molise region, central Italy. Patients who had undergone colon surgery according to National Healthcare Safety Network were included. Data on intervention, perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis, and SSIs occurrence were collected. Chi-square and Fisher's Exact test were used to evaluate any association between risk factors and SSIs. Sixty-eight patients (mean age 70.6 years) were included, and 44 (64.7%) were males. The most frequent interventions were right (n = 17, 25.0%) and left (n = 15, 22.0%) hemicolectomy. Surgical interventions were largely elective (n = 43, 63.2%) and with laparotomy (n = 56, 82.4%). During hospital stay, 10 (14.7%) SSIs were detected, including five superficial, three deep and two organ/space infections. Three (4.4%) additional SSIs were detected at post-discharge follow-up, for 13 (19.1%; CI95%: 9.7%-28.5%) total cases detected. Metronidazole plus Ceftriaxone (third generation cephalosporin) was the antibiotics combination mostly used (n = 36, 52.9%) for the perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis within 60 minutes of incision. The study underlines the need of improvements of the practices currently adopted, since SSIs could be significantly reduced through a multimodal strategy generating bundles. As third generation cephalosporins may facilitate resistant strains emergence, for perioperative prophylaxis in clean-contaminated interventions with entry into gastrointestinal tract, Cefazolin plus Metronidazole or only second generation cephalosporin are recommended. Due to the large variability of post-intervention antibiotic therapy, antimicrobial stewardship approach is strictly necessary.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1939-9278
Volume :
101
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Hospital topics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34821539
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00185868.2021.2006103