| Literature DB >> 17129368 |
Emily S Petherick1, Jane E Dalton, Peter J Moore, Nicky Cullum.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Wound infections are a common complication of surgery that add significantly to the morbidity of patients and costs of treatment. The global trend towards reducing length of hospital stay post-surgery and the increase in day case surgery means that surgical site infections (SSI) will increasingly occur after hospital discharge. Surveillance of SSIs is important because rates of SSI are viewed as a measure of hospital performance, however accurate detection of SSIs post-hospital discharge is not straightforward.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17129368 PMCID: PMC1697816 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-6-170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Electronic databases searched for this review
| Medline (OVID) | 1999–02/2004 |
| EMBASE | 1999–03/2004 |
| CINAHL | 1999–03/2004 |
| The Cochrane Library Database of Systematic Reviews | 1999–2004 Issue 1 |
Characteristics of Included Studies Comparing Alternative Surveillance Systems
| Seaman & Lammers, 1991 | 433 patients with lacerations that were previously sutured, and had returned to the same county hospital for wound evaluation or suture removal. | i) Patient Interview by medical practitioner | Unclear. Patients had to return in 2–3 days for wound check and then at 5 to 14 days for suture removal | 64.5% = 433 183 (27.2%) excluded due to incomplete forms 3 (0.4%) excluded because the definition of infection by the examiner was different to that defined for the study. 52 (7.7%) Patient had prior involvement in the study | 4.8% | Many methodological details not reported in this study. |
| Sands et al 1996 | 5042 patients who underwent 5572 non obstetric procedures. | i) Computerised search of electronic records with codes indicative of SSIs, which were then confirmed by record review by ICPs. Compared with | i) Records were searched 30 days post-operatively. | i) 100% | 2% | Gold standard in this study comprised of wounds detected by any method and confirmed by case note review. |
| Sands et al, 1999 | 3636 patients undergoing 4086 non-obstetric surgical procedures. | i) Computerised search of electronic records with codes indicative of SSIs, which were then confirmed by record review by ICPs. Compared with | i) 30 days post discharge | i) 100% | 2.3% | Study was a substudy of Sands et al 1996, using a subgroup of the study population from and same gold standard as previous study. |
| Mitchell et al, 1999 | 1360 patients having undergone procedures chosen to represent the major elective procedures performed by cardiothoracic, vascular, abdominal, orthopaedic and gynaecological surgeons at the hospital. They included clean and 'contaminated' procedures for which the expected postoperative stay exceeded 5 days. | i) Patient questionnaire | i) 28 days post-operatively. | i) 57.5% | 6.91% | Gold standard unclear as some wounds that were detected by patients but not surgeons were reclassified as SSIs. |
| Whitby et al, 2002 | 343 patients chosen as a purposeful choice of high proportion of 'contaminated' and 'dirty' procedures. | i) Patient questionnaire | i) Questionnaire completed at 4 and 6 weeks | i) 27 (7.8%) Inegible, unable, unwilling to participate. 225/316 (71.2%) completed questionnaire week 4. 190/316 (60.1%) completed questionnaire at week 6. | 16.6% | High levels of disagreement between different health professionals were observed in this study suggesting that when one group can only make the assessment of wound infection based on photographic evidence this may not lead to accurate diagnoses. |
| Martini et al, 2000 | 1664 patients. The patient sample consisted of all surgical patients treated between May 1995 to December 1996. | i) Patient survey | i) 3 months post-discharge | i) 1535 (92%) | 1.1% | Unclear whether patients may have sought treatment for their infected wounds elsewhere and whether the timing of the survey to patients could have led to recall bias. |
| Sands et al, 2003 | 1352 Coronary Artery Bypass Grafts (CABG) procedures performed between June 1997 and March 2003 | i) Administrative claims data and pharmacy dispensing records. Compared with | i) 180 days before surgery until 30 days post surgery. | i) Not reported | 50.9% | Gold standard in this study comprised of wounds detected by any method and confirmed by case note review. |
Assessment of comparative studies using the QUADAS tool
| Was the spectrum of patients representative of the patient who will receive the test in practice? | Yes | Yes | No. CABG patients with a probability score of 0.1 of developing an SSI. | No. Chose moderate to high-risk patients only. | No. Only included patients with lacerations treated at A & E. | Yes | Unclear. Not enough information presented |
| Were the selection criteria clearly described? | Yes | Yes | Yes | No. Patients included if had a surgical wound that could be easily observed and if procedure undertaken had a moderate to high risk infection probability but not stated how this was calculated. | Yes | No. | No |
| Is the reference standard likely to correctly classify the target condition. | Unclear | Unclear | No. Relies on reporting, no observation. | Unclear. Different health professionals engaged in study had different levels of agreement. | Yes | Unclear | No. |
| Is the time period between the reference standard and index test short enough to be reasonably sure that the target condition did not change between the two tests? | Unclear. As authors did not specify what type of surgery was undertaken it is not known whether the follow-up period was sufficient to detect infections. | Unclear | No | Unclear | |||
| Did the whole sample or a random selection of the sample, receive verification using a reference standard of diagnosis? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No. Only those whose surgeon completed the questionnaire | Yes |
| Did patients receive the same reference standard regardless of the test result? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Was the reference standard independent of the index test (i.e. the index test did not form part of the reference standard)? | Unclear | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Was the execution of the index test described in sufficient detail to permit replication of the test? | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes |
| Was the execution of the reference test described in sufficient detail to permit replication of the test? | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference test? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Yes | Unclear | Yes |
| Were the results of the reference standard interpreted without knowledge of the results of the index test? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | No | Unclear | Yes |
| Were the same clinical data available when test results were interpreted as would be available when the test is used in practice? | No. The information available in this standard would not be available in the UK. | No. The information available in this standard would not be available in the UK. | No. The information available in this standard would not be available in the UK. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Were uninterpretable/Intermediate test results reported? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear |
| Were withdrawals from the study explained? | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Yes | Unclear | Unclear |