Risk factors differ for Gram-negative surgical site infection following hip and knee arthroplasty: an observational study from a national surveillance system

Autor: Aakash V, Chhibber, Sally A, Roberts, Nikki, Grae, Arthur J, Morris
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: The New Zealand medical journal. 135(1550)
ISSN: 1175-8716
Popis: To describe risk factors for surgical site infection (SSI) caused by aerobic Gram-negative organisms after hip and knee arthroplasty.Publicly funded hip and knee arthroplasties (performed between 1 July 2013 and 31 December 2017) that developed SSIs were compared to those that did not. SSIs were grouped by causative organism: Gram-negative (Pseudomonas spp. or enteric Gram-negative bacilli) or staphylococcal (pure or mixed growth of Staphylococcus spp.). Independent risk factors in each group were identified.24,842 (54%) hip and 20,993 (46%) knee arthroplasties were performed. There were 497 (1.1%) SSIs. Staphylococci were responsible for 233 SSIs (47%) and Gram-negatives were responsible for 73 (15%). Age, sex, body mass index ≥35kg/m2, smoking status, socioeconomic deprivation, American Society of Anesthesiologists classification, revision surgery and prophylactic antibiotic dose were all independent predictors of all-cause SSI. On subgroup analysis, socioeconomic deprivation and Pasifika ethnicity were independent risk factors for Gram-negative SSI, but not staphylococcal SSI.In this study, socioeconomic deprivation and ethnicity were independent and novel risk factors for Gram-negative SSI following arthroplasty. Some of the SSI risk factors can be modified before arthroplasty (e.g., appropriate timing of prophylactic antibiotics, smoking cessation, weight loss). Non-modifiable risk factors can help identify high-risk procedures where additional pre- and post-operative interventions may be warranted.
Databáze: OpenAIRE