| Literature DB >> 30479666 |
Mr Ravi Krishān Modha1, Chris Morriss-Roberts1, Madeleine Smither1, Jonathan Larholt1, Ian Reilly1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With the advent of bacterial resistance, it is important now more than ever to evaluate use of antibiotic chemoprophylaxis in foot and ankle surgery. Within this area of the body there may be less dissection, surgery time with smaller incisions and importantly smaller sizes of implanted fixation as compared to other bone and joint procedures. Our objective was to systematically evaluate the quality of evidence behind existing guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic chemoprophylaxis; Antibiotic prophylaxis; Biofilm; Foot and ankle surgery; Foot surgery; Orthopedic surgery; Podiatric surgery; Postoperative infection; Surgical site infection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30479666 PMCID: PMC6238341 DOI: 10.1186/s13047-018-0303-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Foot Ankle Res ISSN: 1757-1146 Impact factor: 2.303
Search terms for formal literature search
Selection criteria for review
| Inclusion Criteria for Studies: | |
| • International studies exploring perioperative antibiotic use and subsequent postoperative infection rates and complications in elective foot and ankle surgery | |
| Exclusion Criteria for Studies: | |
| • Studies which included more proximal lower limb procedures in their methodology or findings e.g. knee or hip surgery |
Classification of evidence
| Level | Source of Evidence |
|---|---|
| 1++ | High-quality meta-analyses, systematic reviews of RCTs, or RCTs with very low risk of bias |
| 1+ | Well-conducted meta-analyses, systematic reviews of RCTs, or RCTs with a low risk of bias |
| 1− | Meta-analyses, systematic reviews of RCTs, or RCTs with a high risk of bias |
| 2++ | High-quality systematic reviews of case-control or cohort studies; high-quality case-control or cohort studies with a very low risk of confounding, bias, or chance and a high probability that the relationship is causal |
| 2+ | Well-conducted case-control or cohort studies with a low risk of confounding, bias, or chance and a moderate probability that the relationship is causal |
| 2− | Case-control or cohort studies with a high risk of confounding, bias, or chance and a significant risk that the relationship is not causal |
| 3 | Non-analytical studies (e.g., case reports, case series) |
| 4 | Expert opinion, formal consensus |
NICE hierarchy of evidence and recommendation grading scheme
| Level | Type of evidence | Grade | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Evidence obtained from a single randomised controlled trial or a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials | A | At least one randomised controlled trial as part of a body of literature of overall good quality and consistency addressing the specific recommendation (evidence level I) without extrapolation |
| 2 | Evidence obtained from at least one well-designed controlled study without randomization or Evidence obtained from at least one other well-designed quasiexperimental study | B | Well-conducted clinical studies but no randomised clinical trials on the topic of recommendation (evidence levels II or III); or extrapolated from level I evidence |
| 3 | Evidence obtained from well-designed non-experimental descriptive studies, such as comparative studies, correlation studies | ||
| 4 | Evidence obtained from expert committee reports or opinions and/or clinical experiences of respected authorities | C | Expert committee reports or opinions and/or clinical experiences of respected authorities (evidence level IV). This grading indicates that directly applicable clinical studies of good quality are absent or not readily available |
Fig. 1– Flow Diagram of screening process
Classification of evidence based on NICE protocol [2]
| Study | Study Design | Level of Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Akinyoola et al. (2011) [ | Prospective RCT | 1- |
| Butterworth et al. (2017) [ | Prospective Cohort Study | 2++ |
| Dayton et al. (2015) [ | Consensus Panel (Expert Opinion) | 4 |
| Deacon et al. (1996) [ | Prospective Cohort Study | 2++ |
| Dounis et al. (1995) [ | Prospective Cohort Study | 2- |
| Kurup (2016) [ | Retrospective Cohort Study (Abstract Only) | 4 |
| Mangwani et al. (2016) [ | Prospective RCT | 1++ |
| Pace et al. (2016) [ | National Survey | 4 |
| Reyes et al. (1997) [ | Retrospective Comparative Study | 3 |
| Tantigate et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective Comparative Study | 3 |
| Zgonis et al. (2004) [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | 2+ |
Modified Coleman Methodology Scoring Tool analysis of studies meeting inclusion criteria further demonstrated that over half of the studies included in the review scored 70 or over
| Study | Study size | Mean f/u | Percentage of patients with f/u | No. interventions per group | Type of study | Diagnostic certainty | Description of surgical technique | Description of postoperative rehabilitation | Outcome criteria | Procedure for assessing outcomes | Description of subject selection process | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akinyoola et al. (2011) [ | 106 (7) | 5 | 100% (5) | 1 (10) | Prospective (10) | All (5) | Technique named with detail (5) | Not reported (0) | 2,2,3,3 | 5,0,3,3 | 0,5,0 | 73/100 |
| Butterworth et al. (2017) [ | 4238 (10) | 5 | 98% (5) | 5 | Prospective (10) | All (5) | Technique named (3) | Not reported (0) | 2,2,3,3 | 0,0,3,3 | 5,5,5 | 74/100 |
| Dayton et al. (2015) [ | 64 (4) | 5 | 0 | 0 | Retrospective (0) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2,2,0,0 | 5,0,0,0 | 5,0,0 | 23/100 |
| Deacon et al. (1996) [ | 25 (4) | 5 | 100% (5) | 1 (10) | Prospective (10) | All (5) | Technique named with detail (5) | Not reported (0) | 2,2,3,3 | 5,0,0,3 | 5,0,5 | 72/100 |
| Dounis et al. (1995) [ | 67 (7) | 5 | 100% (5) | 2 interventions per group (5) | Prospective cohort (10) | Confirmed lab results (5) | Technique named (3) | (5) | 2,2,3,3 | 5,4,4,0 | 5,5,5 | 83/100 |
| Kurup (2016) [ | 340 (10) | 5 | 100% (5) | 1 (10) | Retrospective (0) | Confirmed lab results (5) | Technique named (3) | Not reported (0) | 2,2,0,0 | 0,0,0,0 | 0,0,0 | 37/100 |
| Mangwani et al. (2016) [ | 100 (7) | 5 | 100% (5) | 1 (10) | Prospective RCT (15) | All (5) | Technique named (3) | Not reported (0) | 2,2,3,3 | 5,4,3,3 | 5,5,5 | 90/100 |
| Pace et al. (2016) [ | 64 (4) | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2,2,0,0 | 5,0,0,0 | 5,0,0 | 23/100 |
| Reyes et al. (1997) [ | 459 (10) | 5 | 100% (5) | Not stated (0) | Retrospective (0) | All (5) | Not stated (0) | Not reported (0) | 2,2,0,0 | 0,0,0,3 | 5,5,0 | 42/100 |
| Tantigate et al. (2016) [ | 1632 (10) | 5 | 100% (5) | 1 (10) | Retrospective (0) | Not stated (5) | Not stated (0) | Not reported (5) | 2,2,3,3 | 5,0,0,3 | 5,5,5 | 73/100 |
| Zgonis et al. (2004) [ | 555 (10) | 5 | 100% (5) | 1 (10) | Retrospective (0) | All (5) | Technique named (3) | Not reported (0) | 2,2,3,3 | 5,0,0,3 | 5,5,5 | 71/100 |
The remaining studies were included based on their clinical relevance and to validate the paucity within the literature
PICO Analysis for data extraction of the studies meeting the inclusion criteria [15]
| Study Name | Akinyoola et al. (2011) Prospective RCT [ |
|---|---|
| Participants | • 106 consecutive patients undergoing ‘clean, elective foot and ankle surgery’ although over 74% were trauma cases e.g. open fracture requiring open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) thus diminishing the validity of measure as the researchers are no longer measuring what the study sets out or claims. |
| Intervention | • Perioperative timing of antibiotic delivery. |
| Control | • Group 1: Antibiotics received 5 min before inflation of tourniquet (ABT). |
| Outcomes | • Statistically significant postoperative infection rates of 14.8% (ABT) and 3.9% (AAT). |
| Study Name | Butterworth et al. (2017) Prospective Cohort Study [ |
| Participants | • 4238 patients who underwent foot and ankle surgery. |
| Intervention | • Patients receiving no antibiotics. |
| Control | • No control owing to study design. |
| Outcomes | • Postoperative infection rates primary measure using an established and validated tool to capture data. |
| Study Name | Dayton et al. (2015) Consensus Panel (Expert Opinion) [ |
| Participants | • 5 member panel of expert foot and ankle surgeons who received an invitation from the American College of Foot and ankle Surgery (ACFAS) to form part of a consensus group. |
| Intervention | • The panel worked to evaluate via email, telephone, face to face discussions the pertinent literature to antibiotic prophylaxis in foot and ankle surgery and found only 6 studies met their inclusion criteria after their literature search. |
| Control | • No control owing to study design. |
| Outcomes |
|
| • It is appropriate to give antibiotic prophylaxis within foot and ankle surgery where the procedure involves bone, hardware and prosthetic joints. | |
| Study Name | Deacon et al. (1996) Prospective Cohort Study [ |
| Participants | • 25 ASA 1 patients undergoing ‘bunionectomy procedures’ under the age of 55 with no previous history of ‘bunionectomy’ upon the same foot. |
| Intervention | • IV administration of 1 g of Cefazolin 60 min prior to tourniquet inflation. |
| Control | • No control group utilised. |
| Outcomes | • IV administration of 1 g of Cefazolin led to mean bone concentration levels of 2.39 ± 1.19 (sd) μg/g. |
| Study Name | Dounis et al. (1995) Prospective Cohort Study [ |
| Participants | • 67 patients undergoing foot and ankle surgery with no hepatic/renal insufficiency, known allergies to cephalosporin/penicillin antibiotics or concurrent steroid/immunosuppressant/antibiotic therapy. |
| Intervention | • Systemic IV vs Local IV Antibiotics (distal to tourniquet). |
| Control | • Group 1: Antibiotics received IV systemic at stratified intervals of 10 min, 20 min, 2 and 4 h prior to tourniquet inflation. |
| Outcomes | • Ceftazidime 2 g & Ceftriaxone 2 g demonstrated similar bone and soft tissue concentrations in each group. |
| Study Name | Kurup (2016) Conference Paper Abstract Only [ |
| Participants | • 340 patients undergoing elective forefoot surgery where perioperative antibiotics were deemed necessary by the operating clinician were reviewed retrospectively between 2011 and 2015. |
| Intervention | • Procedures “involving metal/resorbable implant or prosthesis” were undertaken with patients receiving 400 mg of IV Teicoplanin. |
| Control | No control owing to study design. |
| Outcomes | • No cases of deep infection. |
| Study Name | Mangwani et al. (2016) Prospective RCT [ |
| Participants | • 100 patients undergoing lesser toe fusion in which an external k-wire was to be left in situ post-surgery for 4–6 weeks, with a mean age of 58 (group one) ± 17.5 (sd) and 62.7 (group two) ± 14.7 (sd) years old. |
| Intervention | • Stratified random allocation of prophylactic Flucloxacillin (or Teicoplanin where an allergy was present). |
| Control | • Group 1: Received prophylactic antibiotics |
| Outcomes | • Group 1: 3 infections (6.2%) 93 toes, 4 diabetics + 1 immunosuppressed patient on methotrexate for sero-negative spondyloarthropathy (PSA) with a high BMI. |
| Study Name | Pace et al. (2016) National Survey [ |
| Participants | • 112 Orthopedic clinicians from the US were mailed a survey with respect to foot surgery and the use of antibiotics and percutaneous k-wires. |
| Intervention | • Mail survey consisted of three clinical scenarios pertaining to use of percutaneous k-wire fixation and minimising postoperative pin tract infection: non-diabetic, diabetic, diabetic with sensory neuropathy. |
| Control | No control owing to study design. |
| Outcomes | • First case: 25% would use postoperative antibiotics, mean 9.4 days. |
| Study Name | Reyes et al. (1997) Retrospective Review [ |
| Participants | • 459 cases of foot and ankle surgery were reviewed between 1993 and 1996. |
| Intervention | • The following data was recorded from patient records and used for descriptive analysis: antibiotic prophylaxis, age, gender, medical history, procedure duration, fixation used, tourniquet use and postoperative infection. |
| Control | No control owing to study design. |
| Outcome | • Overall infection rate of 0.65%. |
| Study Name | Tantigate et al. (2016) Retrospective Comparative Study [ |
| Participants | • Retrospective chart review of 1933 ft and ankle procedures in 1632 patients over a 56 month period. |
| Intervention | • Demographic data, type of antibiotics/dosage/timing were recorded along with rate of postoperative infection. |
| Control | No control owing to study design. |
| Outcomes | • When antibiotics were administered between 15 and 60 min prior to incision, there was a 2.7 – fold, statistically significant higher rate of postoperative infection as compared to the group of patients who received antibiotics< 15 min before incision ( |
| Study Name | Zgonis et al. (2004) Retrospective Review [ |
| Participants | • 555 patients who received elective foot and ankle surgery between 1995 and 2001. |
| Intervention | • The following data was recorded from patient records and used for statistical analysis: antibiotic prophylaxis, age, gender, medical history, procedure duration, fixation used, tourniquet use and postoperative infection. |
| Control | No control owing to study design. |
| Outcome | • IV antibiotics for prophylaxis were stated to be ordered 30 min prior to incision but administration varied from between 2 h prior to incision and just before surgery, meaning that either there has been administration before the drug order was put in or an error in the recording. Nonetheless, these are the details documented in the researcher’s findings, meaning that unfortunately this was not standardised or consistent, which is unfortunately a common attribute of the study design utilised. |
Comparison of SSI rates within all studies utilised for this systematic review
| Study | # Participants | Incidence of SSI | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||
| Akinyoola et al. (2011) [ | 106 | 9.4% | N/A |
| Butterworth et al. (2017) [ | 4238 | 1.1% | 2.6% |
| Dayton et al. (2015) [ | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Deacon et al. (1996) [ | 25 | 0% | N/A |
| Dounis et al. (1995) [ | 67 | N/A | N/A |
| Kurup (2016) [ | 340 | 1.7% | N/A |
| Mangwani et al. (2016) [ | 100 | 6.2% | 1.9% |
| Pace et al. (2016) [ | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Reyes et al. (1997) [ | 459 | 0.43% | 0.88% |
| Tantigate et al. (2016) [ | 1632 | 1.1% | N/A |
| Zgonis et al. (2004) [ | 555 | 1.6% | 1.4% |
Overview of studies which compared SSI rates in cohorts which received and did not receive antibiotic prophylaxis
| Study | # Participants | Incidence of SSI | Overview | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Study Design | Level of Evidence | ||
| Butterworth et al. (2017) [ | 4238 | 1.1% | 2.6% | Prospective Cohort Study | 2++ |
| Mangwani et al. (2016) [ | 100 | 6.2% | 1.9% | Prospective RCT | 1++ |
| Reyes et al. (1997) [ | 459 | 0.43% | 0.88% | Retrospective Cohort Study | 3 |
| Zgonis et al. (2004) [ | 555 | 1.6% | 1.4% | Retrospective Cohort Study | 2+ |
Pooled data from the 4 studies which drew causal relationships between antibiotic chemoprophylaxis and subsequent SSI rate
| # Participants | Incidence of SSI | |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| |
| 5352 | 64 (1.2%) | 124 (2.3%) |
Use of Antibiotics in studies meeting the inclusion criteria and their administration protocol where defined
| Study | Antibiotic Agent(s) | Dose | Route | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akinyoola et al. (2011) [ | Cefuroxime | Not stated | IV | 5 min prior or 1 min following tourniquet inflation as well as 3 doses postoperative at 8 h intervals |
| Butterworth et al. (2017) [ | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated |
| Dayton et al. (2015) [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Deacon et al. (1996) [ | Cefazolin | 1 g | IV | 34–60 min prior to incision |
| Dounis et al. (1995) [ | Ceftazidimine or Ceftriaxone | 2 g | IV | 10–240 min prior to inflation of tourniquet |
| Kurup (2016) [ | Teicoplanin | 400 mg | IV | Not stated |
| Mangwani et al. (2016) [ | Flucloxacillin or Teicoplanin | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated |
| Pace et al. (2016) [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Reyes et al. (1997) [ | Cefazolin or Vancomycin | Not stated | IV | 30–60 min according to manufactures guidance prior to incision |
| Tantigate et al. (2016) [ | Cefazolin, Clindamycin or Vancomycin | Not stated | IV | 0–60 min prior to incision |
| Zgonis et al. (2004) [ | Not stated | Not stated | IV | 0–120 min prior to incision |
List of pathogens encountered in those patients who developed a postoperative SSI in the study conducted by Zgonis et al. [22]
| Pathogen | Sensitivity | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Coagulase-negative | Penicillin Resistant | 6 |
| Coagulase-positive | Penicillin Resistant | 6 |
| Coagulase-positive | Penicillin Sensitive | 2 |
| Methicillin-resistant | Penicillin Resistant | 1 |
|
| Penicillin Resistant | 1 |
| Beta haemolytic | Penicillin Resistant | 1 |
|
| Penicillin Resistant | 1 |
|
| Penicillin Resistant | 1 |
| Gram-positive | Penicillin Resistant | 1 |
|
| Penicillin Sensitive | 1 |