| Literature DB >> 33824381 |
Satoshi Ogihara1, Takashi Yamazaki2, Michio Shiibashi3, Hirotaka Chikuda4, Toru Maruyama5, Kota Miyoshi6, Hirohiko Inanami7, Yasushi Oshima8, Seiichi Azuma9, Naohiro Kawamura10, Kiyofumi Yamakawa11, Nobuhiro Hara2, Jiro Morii12, Rentaro Okazaki9, Yujiro Takeshita6, Junji Nishimoto13, Sakae Tanaka8, Kazuo Saita14.
Abstract
Surgical site infection (SSI) is a serious complication following spine surgery and is correlated with significant morbidities, poor clinical outcomes, and increased healthcare costs. Accurately identifying risk factors can help develop strategies to reduce this devastating consequence; however, few multicentre studies have investigated risk factors for SSI following posterior cervical spine surgeries. Between July 2010 and June 2015, we performed an observational cohort study on deep SSI in adult patients who underwent posterior cervical spine surgery at 10 research hospitals. Detailed patient- and procedure-specific potential risk variables were prospectively recorded using a standardised data collection chart and were reviewed retrospectively. Among the 2184 consecutive adult patients enrolled, 28 (1.3%) developed postoperative deep SSI. Multivariable regression analysis revealed 2 statistically significant independent risk factors: occipitocervical surgery (P < 0.001) and male sex (P = 0.024). Subgroup analysis demonstrated that occipitocervical surgery (P = 0.001) was the sole independent risk factor for deep SSI in patients with instrumented fusion. Occipitocervical surgery is a relatively rare procedure; therefore, our findings were based on a large cohort acquired using a multicentre study. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to identify occipitocervical procedure as an independent risk variable for deep SSI after spinal surgery.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33824381 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-87110-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379