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Title: Effect of optimized antibiotic prophylaxis on the incidence of surgical site infection.
Author(s): Mannien, J.
Kasteren, M.E.E. van (298204479)
Nagelkerke, N.J.
Gyssens, I.C.J. (147850657)
Kullberg, B.J. (074528858)
Wille, J.C.
Boer, A.S. de
Publication year: 2006
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology
ISSN: 0899-823X
Volume: vol. 27
Issue: iss. 12
Start page: p. 1340
End page: p. 1346
Abstract: Objective. To compare the rate of surgical site infection (SSI) before and after an intervention period in which an optimized policy for antibiotic prophylaxis was implemented. To demonstrate that a more prudent, restrictive policy would not have a detrimental effect on patient outcomes.Design. Before-after trial with prospective SSI surveillance in the Dutch nosocomial surveillance network (Preventie Ziekenhuisinfecties door Surveillance [PREZIES]), using the criteria of the Centers for Disease Control, including postdischarge surveillance for up to 1 year.Methods. During a preintervention period and a postintervention period (both 6-13 months), 12 Dutch hospitals collected data on antimicrobial prophylaxis and SSI rates. The study was limited to commonly performed surgical procedures in 4 specialties: vascular, intestinal, gynecological and orthopedic surgery. Selected risk factors for analysis were sex, age, American Society of Anesthesiologists classification, wound contamination class, duration of surgery, length of hospital stay before surgery, and urgency of surgery (elective or acute).Results. A total of 3,621 procedures were included in the study, of which 1,668 were performed before the intervention and 1,953 after. The overall SSI rate decreased from 5.4% to 4.5% (P=.22). Among the procedures included in the study, the largest proportion (55%) were total hip arthroplasty, and the smallest proportion (2%) were replacement of the head of the femur. SSI rates varied from 0% for vaginal hysterectomy to 21.1% for femoropopliteal or femorotibial bypass surgery. Crude and adjusted odds ratios showed that there were no significant changes in procedure-specific SSI rates after the intervention (P>.1).Conclusions. An optimized and restrictive antibiotic prophylaxis policy had no detrimental effect on the outcome of clean and clean contaminated surgery, as measured by SSI rate.
Subject: EBP 3: Effective Primary Care and Public Health
UMCN 4.1: Microbial pathogenesis and host defense
Organization: UMCN Extern
General Internal Medicine
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/49375

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