| Literature DB >> 25221617 |
Boonying Siribumrungwong1, Pinit Noorit2, Chumpon Wilasrusmee3, Ammarin Thakkinstian4.
Abstract
A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted to compare surgical site infection (SSI) between delayed primary (DPC) and primary wound closure (PC) in complicated appendicitis and other contaminated abdominal wounds. Medline and Scopus were searched from their beginning to November 2013 to identify randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing SSI and length of stay between DPC and PC. Studies' selection, data extraction, and risk of bias assessment were done by two independent authors. The risk ratio and unstandardised mean difference were pooled for SSI and length of stay, respectively. Among 8 eligible studies, 5 studies were done in complicated appendicitis, 2 with mixed complicated appendicitis and other types of abdominal operation and 1 with ileostomy closure. Most studies (75%) had high risk of bias in sequence generation and allocation concealment. Among 6 RCTs of complicated appendicitis underwent open appendectomy, the SSI between PC and DPC were not significantly different with a risk ratio of 0.89 (95% CI: 0.46, 1.73). DPC had a significantly 1.6 days (95% CI: 1.41, 1.79) longer length of stay than PC. Our evidence suggested there might be no advantage of DPC over PC in reducing SSI in complicated appendicitis. However, this was based on a small number of studies with low quality. A large scale RCT is further required.Entities:
Keywords: Appendicitis; Delayed primary closure; Meta-analysis; Surgical site infection; Wound closure; Wound infection
Year: 2014 PMID: 25221617 PMCID: PMC4162947 DOI: 10.1186/1749-7922-9-49
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Figure 1Studies selection flow.
Characteristics of eligible studies
| Study | Diseases | Age group | Incision | Prophylaxis antibiotics | Follow up time | Intervention | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Perforated and gangrenous appendicitis | Adults and children | Abdominal right lower quadrant (grid iron) and paramedian | No | 4 weeks | PC (n = 80) | Interrupted nylon sutures (with topical ampicillin in group B (n = 39) |
| DPC (n =42) | Dressing changed was not specified. Wound was closed by interrupted nylon sutures on postoperative day 5 | ||||||
|
| Perforated and gangrenous appendicitis | Children | Abdominal right lower quadrant | Yes | Not stated | PC (n = 38) | Interrupted nylon sutures |
| DPC (n = 25) | Saline dressing daily until day 4 then closed the wound with Steri-Strip | ||||||
|
| Perforated appendicitis, other perforated viscus, traumatic injuries more than 4 hours old, or intra-abdominal abscesses | Adults | Abdominal right lower quadrant and midline | Not stated | 1 month | PC (n =23) | Wound were closed with skin staples |
| DPC (n =26) | Wound packed with saline-soaked gauze, evaluated 3 days after surgery for closure with adhesive strip the next day if appropriate | ||||||
|
| Perforated appendicitis | Children | Abdominal right lower quadrant | Yes | 5-14 days after discharge | PC (n =22) | Not stated |
| DPC (n =22) | Dressing daily and packed with Betadine gauze 5–10 days until suitable for suture | ||||||
|
| Ileostomy closure | Adults | Ileostomy wound | Yes | 2 weeks | PC (n =20) | Skin was closed with skin staples |
| DPC (n =20) | Wound packed with saline-soaked gauze and were not manipulated until day 3 for evaluation and closure on day 4 with nylon sutures if appropriate | ||||||
|
| Peptic perforations, typhoid perforations, appendicular perforation/abscesses, penetrating or blunt abdominal injuries with gastrointestinal perforation, or intraperitoneal abscesses | Adults and children | Abdominal | Yes | 4 weeks | PC (n =40) | Interrupted 2–0 polyamide sutures |
| DPC (n =37) | Packed with saline-soaked gauze for 48 hours then the wound was evaluated for suturing next day with interrupted 2–0 polyamide sutures | ||||||
|
| Perforated appendicitis | Adults and children | Right lower quadrant | Yes | Not stated | PC (n =36) | Interrupted nylon sutures |
| DPC (n =34) | Packed with Betadine-soaked gauze and changed daily until day 5 or later for DPC | ||||||
|
| Complicated appendicitis (grossly inflamed, gangrenous, or perforated appendicitis) | Adults | Right lower quadrant | Yes | Not stated | PC (n =50) | Not stated |
| DPC (n =50) | Daily or twice dressing until postoperative day 3-5 |
Risk bias assessment of eligible studies
| Author | Domains | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding | Incomplete outcome data | Selective outcome report | Others sources of bias | |
|
| Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No* |
|
| No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
|
| Unclear | Unclear | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
|
| No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
|
| No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
|
| Unclear | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
|
| No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
|
| Yes | Unclear | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Yes = Low risk of bias.
No = High risk of bias.
Unclear = Uncertain risk of bias.
*Unbalanced in gangrenous appendicitis between comparison arms.
Figure 2Forest plot of superficial surgical site infection between primary and delayed primary wound closure according to type of patients. CI, confidence interval; DPC, delayed primary closure; RR, risk ratio.
Figure 3Contour enhanced funel plots of surgical site infection between primary and delayed primary wound closure.
Figure 4Forest plot of length of stay after primary and delayed primary wound closure. CI, confidence interval; DPC, delayed primary closure; MD, mean difference; PC, primary closure; SD, standard deviation, A) Pooling overall studies; B) Sensitivity analysis by exclude Chiang [16].