| Literature DB >> 28723736 |
Stijn Willem de Jonge1, Sarah L Gans, Jasper J Atema, Joseph S Solomkin, Patchen E Dellinger, Marja A Boermeester.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to assess the effect of timing of preoperative surgical antibiotic prophylaxis (SAP) on surgical site infection (SSI) and compare the different timing intervals.The benefit of routine use of SAP prior to surgery has long been recognized. However, the optimal timing has not been defined. For the purpose of developing recommendations for the World Health Organization guideline for SSI prevention, a systematic review and meta-analysis of all relevant evidence was conducted.Major medical databases were searched from 1990 to 2016. The primary outcome was SSI after preoperative-SAP comparing different timing intervals. Adjusted odds ratios (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were extracted and pooled for each comparison with a random effects model.Fourteen papers with 54,552 patients were included in this review. In a quantitative analysis, there was no significant difference when SAP was administered 120-60 minutes prior to incision compared to administration 60-0 minutes prior to incision. Studies investigating different timing intervals within the last 60 minutes time frame reported contradictive results. The risk of SSI almost doubled when SAP was administered after first incision (OR:1.89; 95%CI:[1.05-3.40]) and was 5 times higher when administered more than 120 minutes prior to incision (OR5.26; 95%CI:[3.29-8.39]).Administration of antibiotic prophylaxis more than 120 minutes before incision or after incision is associated a higher risk of surgical site infections than administration less than 120 minutes before incision. Within this 120-minute time frame prior to incision, no differential effects could be identified. The broadly accepted recommendation to administer prophylaxis within a 60-minute time frame prior to incision could not be substantiated.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28723736 PMCID: PMC5521876 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000006903
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.889
Figure 1Flowchart of the study selection process. Numbers between parentheses represent the results of the initial search before the update in august 2016 represented by the numbers outside the parentheses. ∗To avoid drug toxicity, vancomycin and fluoroquinolones have to be infused over a prolonged period of time (>60 min) compared to other antibiotics. As timing is measured from the moment of administration and a delay to full infusion is anticipated with the above-mentioned antibiotics, we considered it necessary to differentiate these from fast infusion antibiotics (for example, cephalosporins). Studies that did not have this differentiation were excluded due to unclear timing categories.
Study characteristics.
Study characteristics.
Results per timing category.
Figure 2Visualization of results. The table provides a visualization of our findings from all the studies reporting adjusted odds ratios. The vertical dotted line represents the time of first incision. The field to the left of it represents timing prior to first incision, to the right timing after first incision. Blue-bordered fields represent the authors’ best timing interval. Blue fields without borders represent timing intervals that do not differ significantly from the reported best interval. Red fields represent intervals with a significant higher risk of SSI.
Figure 3Meta analyses (A) Comparison 1: administration of surgical antibiotic prophylaxis post- versus pre- incision. (B) Comparison 2: Administration of surgical antibiotic prophylaxis more than 120 min prior to incision versus within 120 min prior to incision. (C) Comparison 3a: Administration of surgical antibiotic prophylaxis 120–60 min prior to incsision versus 60–0 min prior to incision. Crude unadjusted data were used in the meta analyses. (D) Comparison 3b: Administration of surgical antibiotic prophylaxis 60–30 min prior to incision versus 30–0 min prior to incision.
Quality assessment, Newcastle–Ottawa scale for nonrandomized studies.
Grade table.