| Literature DB >> 30929326 |
Kevin J Hebert1, Tobias S Kohler2.
Abstract
Penile prosthesis infection is the most significant complication following prosthesis implant surgery leading to postoperative morbidity, increased health care costs, and psychological stress for the patient. We aimed to identify risk factors associated with increased postoperative penile prosthesis infection. A review of the literature was performed via PubMed using search terms including inflatable penile prosthesis, penile implant, and infection. Articles were given a level of evidence score using the 2011 Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine Guidelines. Multiple factors were associated with increased risk of post-prosthesis placement infection (Level of Evidence Rating) including smoking tobacco (Level 1), CD4 T-cell count <300 (Level 4), Staphylococcus aureus nasal carriage (Level 2), revision surgery (Level 2), prior spinal cord injury (Level 3), and hemoglobin A1c level >8.5 (Level 2). Factors with no effect on infection rate include: preoperative cleansing with antiseptic (Level 4), history of prior radiation (Level 3), history of urinary diversion (Level 4), obesity (Level 3), concomitant circumcision (Level 3), immunosuppression (Level 4), age >75 (Level 4), type of hand cleansing (Level 1), post-surgical drain placement (Level 3), and surgical approach (Level 4). Factors associated with decreased rates of infection included: surgeon experience (Level 2), "No Touch" technique (Level 3), preoperative parenteral antibiotics (Level 2), antibiotic coated devices (Level 2), and operative field hair removal with clippers (Level 1). Optimization of pre-surgical and intraoperative risk factors is imperative to reduce the rate of postoperative penile prosthesis infection. Additional research is needed to elucidate risk factors and maximize benefit.Entities:
Keywords: Erectile dysfunction; Infection; Penile implant; Penile prosthesis; Sexual dysfunction, physiological
Year: 2019 PMID: 30929326 PMCID: PMC6704299 DOI: 10.5534/wjmh.180123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Mens Health ISSN: 2287-4208 Impact factor: 5.400
Perioperative risk factors of IPP infection
| Preoperative/intraoperative factor | Implication on infection risk | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Preoperative cleansing with antiseptic | No effect on infection risk | 1 |
| Smoking status | Increased risk with active smoking | 1 |
| HIV status | Increased risk if CD4 count <300 | 4 |
| Increased risk of infection | 2 | |
| Preoperative treatment of | Decreased risk of infection | 2 |
| Revision surgery | Increased risk of infection | 2 |
| HbA1c level | Increased risk if HbA1c >8.5 | 2 |
| History of pelvic radiation | No effect on infection risk | 3 |
| History of urinary diversion | No effect on infection risk | 4 |
| Spinal cord injury | Increased infection risk | 3 |
| Obesity | No effect on infection risk | 3 |
| Concomitant circumcision | No effect on infection risk | 3 |
| Immunosuppression | No effect on infection risk | 4 |
| Age >75 years | No effect on infection risk | 4 |
| Preoperative urine culture | Decreased risk of infection if negative | 5 |
| Method of preoperative hair removal | Decreased risk of infection using clippers | 1 |
| Operative site scrub | Decreased risk of infection with chlorhexidine | 1 |
| Surgeon hand scrub type | No effect on infection risk | 1 |
| Antibiotic impregnated/coated implant | Decreased risk of infection | 2 |
| Perioperative parenteral antibiotics | Decreased risk of infection | 2 |
| Postoperative drain placement | No effect on infection risk | 3 |
| No Touch technique | Decreased infection risk | 3 |
| Surgeon experience | Decreased infection risk with more experience | 2 |
| Surgical approach | No effect on infection risk | 4 |
IPP: inflatable penile prosthesis, HIV: human immunodeficiency virus, HbA1c: hemoglobin A1c.