Improving Wound Healing and Infection Control in Long-term Care with Bacterial Fluorescence Imaging.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 DERMATOLOGY
Advances in Skin & Wound Care Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-17 DOI:10.1097/ASW.0000000000000177
Martha R Kelso, Mark Jaros
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: High bacterial burden stalls wound healing and can quickly progress to infection and sepsis in complex, older-adult patients in long-term care (LTC) or skilled nursing facilities (SNFs).

Objective: To investigate the outcomes of point-of-care fluorescence (FL) imaging (MolecuLight i:X) of bacterial loads, which are frequently asymptomatic, to inform customized wound treatment plans for patients in LTC/SNFs.

Methods: In this retrospective pre/postinterventional cohort study, the authors compared the healing and infection-associated outcomes of 167 pressure injuries from 100 Medicare beneficiaries before and after implementation of FL imaging.

Results: Most patient demographics and wound characteristics did not differ significantly between the standard-of-care (SOC; n = 71 wounds) and FL (n = 96 wounds) cohorts. Significantly more wounds (+71.0%) healed by 12 weeks in the FL cohort (38.5%) versus the SoC cohort (22.5%). Wounds in the FL cohort also healed 27.7% faster (-4.8 weeks), on average, and were 1.4 times more likely to heal per Kaplan-Meier survival analysis (hazard ratio = 1.40; 95% CI, 0.90-2.12). Infection-related complications decreased by 75.3% in the FL cohort, and a significant shift from largely systemic to topical antibiotic prescribing was evidenced.

Conclusions: Fluorescence-imaging-guided management of wounds significantly improved healing and infection outcomes in highly complex and multimorbid patients in LTC/SNFs. Proactive bacterial infection management via local treatments was enabled by earlier, objective detection. These reported outcome improvements are comparable to randomized controlled trials and cohort studies from less compromised, selectively controlled outpatient populations. Fluorescence imaging supports proactive monitoring and management of planktonic and biofilm-encased bacteria, improving patient care in a complex, real-world setting.

利用细菌荧光成像技术改善长期护理中的伤口愈合和感染控制。
背景:在长期护理(LTC)或专业护理机构(SNF)中,高细菌负荷会阻碍伤口愈合,并迅速发展为感染和败血症:对于长期护理(LTC)或专业护理机构(SNF)中病情复杂的老年成人患者来说,高细菌负荷会阻碍伤口愈合,并可能迅速发展为感染和败血症:目的:研究护理点荧光 (FL) 成像(MolecuLight i:X)对经常无症状的细菌负荷的效果,为 LTC/SNFs 患者定制伤口治疗计划提供依据:在这项干预前后的回顾性队列研究中,作者比较了 100 名医疗保险受益人的 167 处压伤在使用 FL 成像前后的愈合情况和感染相关结果:大多数患者的人口统计学特征和伤口特征在标准护理组(SOC;n = 71 个伤口)和 FL 组(n = 96 个伤口)之间没有明显差异。与标准护理组(22.5%)相比,FL 组(38.5%)有更多伤口(+71.0%)在 12 周前愈合。根据卡普兰-米尔生存分析,FL 组的伤口愈合速度平均快 27.7%(-4.8 周),愈合几率是 SoC 组的 1.4 倍(危险比 = 1.40;95% CI,0.90-2.12)。荧光成像队列中与感染相关的并发症减少了75.3%,抗生素处方也从主要使用全身性抗生素显著转向使用局部抗生素:荧光成像指导下的伤口管理显著改善了 LTC/SNF 中高度复杂和多病患者的愈合和感染效果。通过早期的客观检测,可以通过局部治疗积极控制细菌感染。所报告的这些疗效改善情况与随机对照试验和来自病情较轻、选择性控制门诊患者的队列研究结果相当。荧光成像支持对浮游生物和生物膜包裹的细菌进行主动监测和管理,从而改善了复杂的实际环境中的患者护理。
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来源期刊
Advances in Skin & Wound Care
Advances in Skin & Wound Care DERMATOLOGY-NURSING
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
271
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: A peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal, Advances in Skin & Wound Care is highly regarded for its unique balance of cutting-edge original research and practical clinical management articles on wounds and other problems of skin integrity. Each issue features CME/CE for physicians and nurses, the first journal in the field to regularly offer continuing education for both disciplines.
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