Alexandre Ansorge, Michael Betz, Oliver Wetzel, Marco Dimitri Burkhard, Igor Dichovski, Mazda Farshad, Ilker Uçkay
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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究评估脊柱手术后围手术期尿管(UC)携带与(革兰氏阴性)手术部位感染(ssi)之间的潜在关联。这是一项回顾性、单中心、病例对照研究,分层组比较,采用多变量逻辑回归分析进行病例混合调整。大约一半的患者(2734/5485例手术)携带UC 1天(中位持续时间)(四分位数范围,1 - 1天)。将围手术期携带UC的患者与未携带SSI的患者进行比较,一般情况下,革兰氏阴性。SSI率为1.2%(67/5485),进行了67次翻修手术。革兰氏阴性病原体导致16例ssi。7例革兰氏阴性病例在尿液和脊柱中同时发现了相同的病原体。在多变量分析中,UC携带持续时间与SSI相关(OR 1.1, 95%可信区间1.1 - 1.1),尽管低于经典危险因素,如糖尿病(OR 2.2, 95% ci 1.1 - 4.2)、吸烟(OR 2.4, 95% ci 1.4-4.3)或较高的asa评分(OR 2.3, 95% ci 1.4-3.6)。在针对革兰氏阴性ssi的第二个多变量分析中,女性(OR 3.8, 95%CI 1.4-10.6)和UC载体>1天(OR 5.5, 95%CI 1.5-20.3)与革兰氏阴性ssi相关。脊柱手术后革兰氏阴性ssi似乎与围手术期UC携带有关,尤其是在女性中。其他SSI危险因素包括糖尿病、吸烟和较高的ASA分数。
Perioperative Urinary Catheter Use and Association to (Gram-Negative) Surgical Site Infection after Spine Surgery
This study evaluates potential associations between the perioperative urinary catheter (UC) carriage and (Gram-negative) surgical site infections (SSIs) after spine surgery. It is a retrospective, single-center, case-control study stratifying group comparisons, case-mix adjustments using multivariate logistic regression analyses. Around half of the patients (2734/5485 surgeries) carried a UC for 1 day (median duration) (interquartile range, 1–1 days). Patients with perioperative UC carriage were compared to those without regarding SSI, in general, and Gram-negative, exclusively. The SSI rate was 1.2% (67/5485), yielding 67 revision surgeries. Gram-negative pathogens caused 16 SSIs. Seven Gram-negative episodes revealed the same pathogen concomitantly in the urine and the spine. In the multivariate analysis, the UC carriage duration was associated with SSI (OR 1.1, 95% confidence interval 1.1–1.1), albeit less than classical risk factors like diabetes (OR 2.2, 95%CI 1.1–4.2), smoking (OR 2.4, 95%CI 1.4–4.3), or higher ASA-Scores (OR 2.3, 95%CI 1.4–3.6). In the second multivariate analysis targeting Gram-negative SSIs, the female sex (OR 3.8, 95%CI 1.4–10.6) and a UC carriage > 1 day (OR 5.5, 95%CI 1.5–20.3) were associated with Gram-negative SSIs. Gram-negative SSIs after spine surgery seem associated with perioperative UC carriage, especially in women. Other SSI risk factors are diabetes, smoking, and higher ASA scores.