| Literature DB >> 32266018 |
Taijuan Zhang1, Fujie Zhang1, Zongnan Chen2, Xiuling Cheng3.
Abstract
The usefulness of dressing a surgical wound beyond the first 24-48 h of surgery is currently a controversial issue. The aim of this meta-analysis was to compare the early and delayed removal of dressing following primary closure in the management of clean and contaminated surgical wounds. Systematic searches were conducted in various databases including Medline, Cochrane Controlled Register of Trials (CENTRAL), Scopus, and Embase from January, 1964 until October, 2019. We used the Cochrane risk of bias tool to assess the quality of published trials. We carried out a meta-analysis with random-effects model and reported pooled risk ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). In total, we analysed 10 studies with 1,708 participants. All the studies were randomized controlled trials, while the majority of studies had unclear or high bias risks. Early dressing removal was favoured with respect to surgical site infection (pooled RR=0.89; 95% CI: 0.61 to 1.29), patient's perception on safety (pooled RR=0.60; 95% CI: 0.48 to 0.76) and comfort (pooled RR=0.95; 95% CI: 0.74 to 1.22), while the remaining outcomes favoured delayed dressing removal. However, none of the factors had statistically significant difference between two interventions except the patient's perception on safety. To summarize, delayed removal of dressing is not superior to early removal following primary closure of clean or clean-contaminated surgical wounds. Copyright: © Zhang et al.Entities:
Keywords: occlusive dressings; surgical wound; wound closure techniques; wounds and injuries
Year: 2020 PMID: 32266018 PMCID: PMC7132221 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2020.8591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart showing the selection of studies for the present review (n=10).
Characteristics of the included studies, n=10.
| No | Author, year (Refs.) | Country | Study design | Type of Surgery | Sample size in early removal arm | Sample size in delayed removal arm | Intervention | Mean age |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ajao 1997( | Nigeria | Randomized controlled trial | Various surgical procedures (all operations on the trunk) | 50 | 50 | Group 1 (n=50): Early dressing removal, wound left open 24-36 h after suturing. Group 2 (n=50): Delayed dressing removal, dressing left for 7-10 days unless infection suspected, when the wound was inspected and dressing reapplied. | Not provided |
| 2 | Dosseh | Togo | Randomized controlled trial | Abdominal surgery, neck surgery and thoracic surgery and having clean or clean-contaminated wounds | 51 | 51 | Group 1 (n=51): Early dressing removal,wound left open 48 h after surgery. Group 2 (n=51): Delayed dressing removal, dressing changed every 48 h until suture removal. | 36 years Group A=26 years Group B=27.5 years |
| 3 | Mendes | Brazil | Randomized controlled trial | Breast augmentation surgery | 40 | 38 | Group 1 (n=40): Early dressing removal, wound left open 24 h after surgery. | Group 2 (n=38): Delayed dressing removal, ressing left for 6 postoperative days. |
| 4. | Nesrallah | USA | Randomized controlled trial | Caesarean section | 300 | 302 | Group 1 (n=300): Early dressing removal, wound left open 12-30 h after surgery. Group 2 (n=302): Delayed dressing removal, dressing left for 30-48 h after surgery | Not provided |
| 5 | Peleg | USA | Randomized controlled trial | Caesarean section | 160 | 160 | Group 1 (n=160): Early dressing removal, wound left open 6 h after surgeryGroup 2 (n=160): Delayed dressing removal, dressing left for 24 h after surgery | Group A=32.9 years Group B=31.6 years |
| 6 | Ramkumar | UK | Randomized controlled trial | Unilateral or bilateral primary correction of prominent ears | 39 | 39 | Group 1 (n=39): Early dressing removal, head bandage was removed the next day. Group 2 (n=39): Delayed dressing removal, head bandage was removed after 10 days. Both groups received Tubigrip bandage at night-time for 4-6 weeks | 10 years |
| 7 | Ritting | USA | Randomized controlled trial | Mini-open carpal tunnel release | 45 | 49 | Group 1 (n=45): Early dressing removal, within 48-72 h. Group 2 (n=49): Delayed dressing removal, after 2 weeks. | Group A = 46.3 years Group B = 44.8 years |
| 8 | Veiga | Brazil | Randomized controlled trial | Breast reconstruction surgery | 94 | 92 | Group 1 (n=94): Early dressing removal, within 24 h. Group 2 (n=92): Delayed dressing removal, after 6 days. | Group A = 47.8 years Group B = 49.3 years |
| 9 | Veiga-Filho | Brazil | Randomized controlled trial | Reduction mammoplasty | 35 | 35 | Group 1 (n=94): Early dressing removal, within 24 hours Group 2 (n=92): Delayed dressing removal, after 6 days. | 34 years |
| 10 | Wipke-Tevis and Stotts, 1998( | USA | Randomized controlled trial | Coronary artery bypass graft surgery with saphenous vein grafts | 39 | 39 | Group 1 (n=39): Early dressing removal, wound left open 24 h after surgery Group 2 (n=39): Delayed dressing removal, dressing remained in place until removal of sutures. | 62 years |
Risk of bias assessment for the included studies, n=10.
| No | Author year, (Ref) | Random sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding of the participants | Blinding of outcome assessment | Incomplete outcome data | Selective reporting of outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ajao 1997, ( | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | High risk |
| 2 | Dosseh | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk | High risk | High risk |
| 3 | Mendes | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk |
| 4 | Nesrallah | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | High risk | High risk | Unclear risk | Unclear risk |
| 5 | Peleg | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | High risk | Low risk | Unclear risk |
| 6 | Ramkumar | Unclear risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Low risk |
| 7 | Ritting | Low risk | Unclear risk | High risk | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk |
| 8 | Veiga | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk |
| 9 | Veiga-Filho | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk |
| 10 | Wipke-Tevis and Stotts, 1998( | Low risk | Low risk | High risk | Unclear risk | High risk | High risk |
Figure 2Forest plot showing the difference in surgical site infection between early and delayed dressing removal techniques (n=10).
Figure 3Funnel plot checking for publication bias (n=10).
Figure 4Forest plot showing the difference in surgical wound dehiscence between early and delayed dressing removal techniques (n=4).
Figure 5Forest plot showing the difference in patient satisfaction between early and delayed dressing removal techniques (n=2).
Figure 6Forest plot showing the difference in patient perception on safety between early and delayed dressing removal techniques (n=2).
Figure 7Forest plot showing the difference in patient perception on comfort between early and delayed dressing removal techniques (n=2).
Figure 8Forest plot showing the difference in patient perception on convenience between early and delayed dressing removal techniques (n=2).