Can surgical site infections be controlled through microbiological surveillance? A three-year laboratory-based surveillance at an orthopaedic unit, retrospective observatory study

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Abstract

Objective: The aims of the study were to analyse the surgical site infections (SSIs) in patients operated at an orthopaedic ward and to describe the drug-resistance of the aetiology of those infections. Also, analyse the possibility of SSI control through microbiological surveillance. Additionally, we have studied the information inferred by aggregating cumulative antibiograms for the SSIs of the studied orthopaedic unit. Design: Cross-sectional studies carried out in 2013–2015. Setting and patients: Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery Unit in Sosnowiec, Poland; 5995 patients, 5239 operations. Methods: Retrospective laboratory-based data collection study of surgical site infections. Results: SSI incidence rate was 6.6%, in the implantations—hip prosthesis 5.8% and knee prosthesis 5.4%, about 6 times higher compared with European HAI-Net. SSIs were usually caused by Gram-positive bacteria (56%). The prevalence of MDR microorganisms was 22.6%, and mainly concerned the Gram-negative bacilli: 97.6% of Acinetobacter baumannii and 50.0% of Klebsiella pneumoniae were multidrug-resistant. On the basis of what the Formula for Rational Empiric Antimicrobial Therapy analysis has shown, the use of amikacin, imipenem and ciprofloxacin has been recommended as the most efficient in the empirical therapy of SSIs. Conclusions: The infection control was a significant problem at the studied orthopaedic unit, as evidenced by the SSI incidence rate significantly higher than expected. We suggest implementing the infection control and prevention based on evidence-based medicine, and a unit-based surveillance. A cumulative unit-based antibiogram reflects the drug-susceptibility pattern for the strains from the infections acquired at the unit.

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Pawłowska, I., Ziółkowski, G., Wójkowska-Mach, J., & Bielecki, T. (2019). Can surgical site infections be controlled through microbiological surveillance? A three-year laboratory-based surveillance at an orthopaedic unit, retrospective observatory study. International Orthopaedics, 43(9), 2009–2016. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00264-019-04298-x

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