Chlorhexidine Showers are Associated With a Reduction in Surgical Site Infection Following Spine Surgery: An Analysis of 4266 Consecutive Surgeries

被引:18
|
作者
Chan, Andrew K. [1 ]
Ammanuel, Simon G. [1 ]
Chan, Alvin Y. [2 ]
Oh, Taemin [1 ]
Skrehot, Henry C. [1 ]
Edwards, Caleb S. [1 ]
Kondapavulur, Sravani [1 ]
Miller, Catherine A. [1 ]
Nichols, Amy D. [3 ]
Liu, Catherine [4 ,5 ]
Dhall, Sanjay S. [1 ]
Clark, Aaron J. [1 ]
Chou, Dean [1 ]
Ames, Christopher P. [1 ]
Mummaneni, Praveen, V [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Neurosurg, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[2] Med Coll Wisconsin, Dept Neurosurg, Milwaukee, WI 53226 USA
[3] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Hosp Epidemiol & Infect Control, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[4] Univ Washington, Fred Hutchinson Canc Res Inst, Vaccine & Infect Dis Div, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[5] Univ Washington, Div Allergy & Infect Dis, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
Chlorhexidine; Surgical site infection; Spinal surgery; Nonfusion surgery; Fusion surgery; Nonfusion; Fusion; RISK-FACTORS; CONTROLLED-TRIAL; FUSION; MORTALITY; GLUCONATE; KNEE;
D O I
10.1093/neuros/nyy568
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
BACKGROUND: Surgical site infection (SSI) is a common complication following spinal surgery. Prevention is critical to maintaining safe patient care and reducing additional costs associated with treatment. OBJECTIVE: To determine the efficacy of preoperative chlorhexidine (CHG) showers on SSI rates following fusion and nonfusion spine surgery. METHODS: A mandatory preoperative CHG shower protocol was implemented at our institution in November 2013. A cohort comparison of 4266 consecutive patients assessed differences in SSI rates for the pre- and postimplementation periods. Subgroup analysis was performed on the type of spinal surgery (eg, fusion vs nonfusion). Data represent all spine surgeries performed between April 2012 and April 2016. RESULTS: The overall mean SSI rate was 0.4%. There was no significant difference between the pre- (0.7%) and postimplementation periods (0.2%; P = .08). Subgroup analysis stratified by procedure type showed that the SSI rate for the nonfusion patients was significantly lower in the post- (0.1%) than the preimplementation group (0.7%; P = .02). There was no significant difference between SSI rates for the pre- (0.8%) and postimplementation groups (0.3%) for the fusion cohort (P = .21). In multivariate analysis, the implementation of preoperative CHG showers were associated with significantly decreased odds of SSI (odds ratio = 0.15, 95% confidence interval [0.03-0.55], P < .01). CONCLUSION: This is the largest study investigating the efficacy of preoperative CHG showers on SSI following spinal surgery. In adjusted multivariate analysis, CHG showering was associated with a significant decrease in SSI following spinal surgery.
引用
收藏
页码:817 / 826
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] A Clinical Risk Model for Surgical Site Infection Following Pediatric Spine Deformity Surgery
    Matsumoto, Hiroko
    Larson, Elaine L.
    Warren, Shay I.
    Hammoor, Bradley T.
    Bonsignore-Opp, Lisa
    Troy, Michael J.
    Barrett, Kody K.
    Striano, Brendan M.
    Li, Gen
    Terry, Mary Beth
    Roye, Benjamin D.
    Lenke, Lawrence G.
    Skaggs, David L.
    Glotzbecker, Michael P.
    Flynn, John M.
    Roye, David P.
    Vitale, Michael G.
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME, 2022, 104 (04): : 364 - 375
  • [22] Surgical Site Infection in Spine Surgery: Who Is at Risk?
    Yao, Reina
    Zhou, Hanbing
    Choma, Theodore J.
    Kwon, Brian K.
    Street, John
    GLOBAL SPINE JOURNAL, 2018, 8 : 5S - 30S
  • [23] Epidemiology and outcomes associated with surgical site infection following bariatric surgery
    Chopra, Teena
    Marchaim, Dror
    Lynch, Ylinne
    Kosmidis, Chris
    Zhao, Jing J.
    Dhar, Sorabh
    Gheyara, Naasha
    Turner, Deborah
    Gulish, Don
    Wood, Michael
    Alangaden, George
    Kaye, Keith S.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INFECTION CONTROL, 2012, 40 (09) : 815 - 819
  • [24] Factors Associated With Surgical Site Infection Following Gastric Surgery in Japan
    Morikane, Keita
    Honda, Hitoshi
    Suzuki, Satowa
    INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2016, 37 (10): : 1167 - 1172
  • [25] Vancomycin Powder Regimen for Prevention of Surgical Site Infection in Complex Spine Surgeries
    Van Hal, Michael
    Lee, Joon
    Laudermilch, Dann
    Nwasike, Chinedu
    Kang, James
    CLINICAL SPINE SURGERY, 2017, 30 (08): : E1062 - E1065
  • [26] Multiple preoperative biomarkers are associated with incidence of surgical site infection following surgeries of ankle fractures
    Liu, Dawei
    Zhu, Yanbin
    Chen, Wei
    Li, Ming
    Liu, Song
    Zhang, Yingze
    INTERNATIONAL WOUND JOURNAL, 2020, 17 (03) : 842 - 850
  • [27] Medicaid Status Is Associated With Higher Surgical Site Infection Rates After Spine Surgery
    Manoso, Mark W.
    Cizik, Amy M.
    Bransford, Richard J.
    Bellabarba, Carlo
    Chapman, Jens
    Lee, Michael J.
    SPINE, 2014, 39 (20) : 1707 - 1713
  • [28] Establishment of a suitable combination of serological markers to diagnose surgical site infection following spine surgery: A novel surgical site infection scoring system
    Imabayashi, Hideaki
    Miyake, Atsushi
    Chiba, Kazuhiro
    JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC SCIENCE, 2022, 27 (03) : 569 - 573
  • [29] Implementation of an Infection Prevention Bundle to Reduce Surgical Site Infections and Cost Following Spine Surgery
    Featherall, Joseph
    Miller, Jacob A.
    Bennett, E. Emily
    Lubelski, Daniel
    Wang, Hannah
    Khalaf, Tagreed
    Krishnaney, Ajit A.
    JAMA SURGERY, 2016, 151 (10) : 988 - 990
  • [30] Surgical site infection following elective orthopaedic surgeries in geriatric patients: Incidence and associated risk factors
    Liang, Zhiquan
    Rong, Kai
    Gu, Wenfei
    Yu, Xin
    Fang, Rui
    Deng, Yingjie
    Lu, Laijin
    INTERNATIONAL WOUND JOURNAL, 2019, 16 (03) : 773 - 780