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Department of O UTCOMES R ESEARCH

Prevention of Surgical Wound Infections Presented by : Daniel Sessler , MD. Department of O UTCOMES R ESEARCH. Disclosure Slide. I have no personal financial interest related to the presentation.

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Department of O UTCOMES R ESEARCH

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  1. Prevention of Surgical Wound Infections Presented by: Daniel Sessler, MD Department of OUTCOMESRESEARCH

  2. Disclosure Slide I have no personal financial interest related to the presentation. I work with many companies that make temperature monitoring and management systems through grant and research support.

  3. Infection Prevention Prophylactic Antibiotics Smoking Supplemental Oxygen Normoglycemia Normothermia Fluid Management Transfusion www.OR.org

  4. Surgical Site Infections • Common • >500,000 surgical site infections per year in the States • 1-3% incidence overall; ≈10% after colon surgery • Serious • Increases hospital duration ≈1 week • Doubles ICU admission and mortality • Costly • $1.6 billion annually in the United States • 3.7 million excess hospital days yearly in the States • CMS priority • SCIP measure • Probable “pay-for-performance” measure

  5. Decisive Period • All wounds become contaminated • Infections established within 2 h of contamination • Interventions most effective during “Decisive Period” • Progression to infection determined by • Prophylactic antibiotics • Host defense

  6. Prophylactic Antibiotics • Effective only during the decisive period • Subsequent administration useless (or harmful) • Should be given within 1 hour before incision • Repeat after 4-6 hours for long operations • Discontinue within 24-48 hours • Various guidelines for type of antibiotic • In practice, surgeons choose antibiotics • Our mission is to give them — on time

  7. Host Defense • Oxidative killing by neutrophils • Primary defense against surgical pathogens • Oxygen is transformed to superoxide radical • Killing determined by tissue oxygen • Oxygen also • Promotes angiogenesis • Improves scar formation

  8. Measuring Tissue Oxygen Tissue oxygenation ≠ saturation; much lower than arterial PO2

  9. Tissue Oxygen Correlates with Infection Hopf, et al., 1996, Arch Surg

  10. Supplemental Oxygen • Supplemental Oxygen • Easy to provide • Inexpensive (a few cents/patient) • Recent utilization • Usually 30% in Europe • Essentially random concentrations in the States • Rationale for various concentrations unclear

  11. Postoperative Atelectasis: 30% vs. 80%

  12. Greif, et al. NEJM, 2000 • Hypothesis: 80% O2 reduces wound infection risk • 500 patients having elective colon resection • Standardized antibiotic, anesthetic, & fluid management • Intraoperative core temperature maintained at 36oC • Randomization • 30% oxygen (balance nitrogen); PaO2 ≈ 120 • 80% oxygen (balance nitrogen) ; PaO2 ≈ 350 • Wound infections • Wounds evaluated daily by a blinded observer • Pus and positive culture required for diagnosis

  13. Subcutaneous Oxygen Tension (n=30)

  14. Oxygen & Wound Infection

  15. Effect of Infections Infections prolong hospitalization by a full week

  16. Oxygen Confirmation

  17. PROXI Trial • 30% vs. 80% perioperative oxygen • Randomized, blinded • 1,400 patients • Primary result • Wound infection rates nearly identical • Why results differ from previous trials unclear Meyhoff, Lancet 2009

  18. Temperature and Infection • Hypothermia • Decreases tissue oxygen • Impairs numerous immune functions • Hypothesis: normothermia reduces infection risk • 200 patients having elective colon resection • Standardized antibiotic, anesthetic, & fluid management • Randomized to normothermia or ≈2°C hypothermia • Wound infections • Wounds evaluated daily by a blinded observer • Pus and positive culture required for diagnosis

  19. Hypothermia & Wound Infection

  20. Wound Infections: Melling, et al.

  21. Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) • Patients included (denominator) • Surgical procedure • General or neuraxial anesthesia ≥60 minutes • Not having documented intentional hypothermia • Criteria (numerator) • Active over-body intraoperative warming, or • Core temp ≥36°C within 30 min before anesth end time, or • Core temp ≥36°C within 15 min after anesth end time • Comments • A similar “pay-for-reporting” measure coming • “Core temperature” sites and devices undefined

  22. Blood Transfusion • Transfusion can save lives • Appropriate triggers unknown • Associated with complications • Viral infection not major risk • Potential risk mechanisms • Highly immunogenic • Nitric oxide depletion

  23. Koch, et al., 2006, Crit Care Med Younger blood Older blood N=11,963. Transfusions increase morbidities and infection

  24. Marik & Corwin, 2008, Crit Care Med Transfusions double infection risk

  25. Berezina, et al., 2002, J Surg Res Younger blood Older blood Younger blood Older blood Stored blood degrades over time, especially after 2 weeks

  26. Older Blood Increases Infection Risk

  27. Koch, et al., NEJM 2008 Younger blood Older blood Prolonged blood storage increases morbidity and mortality

  28. Smoking and Infection • Tissue oxygen decreases: 65 ± 7 to 44 ± 3 mmHg • Jensen, et al. Arch Surg, 1991 • Tissue oxygen 40-50 mmHg —> infection • Hopf, et al. Arch Surg, 1997 • "Pack-a-day" smokers hypoxic most of the time • Habitual smoking increases infection risk 23% • Neumayer, et al. J Am Coll Surg, 2007 • Effect of smoking perioperative cessation unclear

  29. Hyperglycemia and Infection • Tight control of glucose improves immunity • Gallacher et al. Diabet Med 1995 • Glucose control maintains neutrophil phagocytosis • Athos et al. Anesth Analg 1999 • Mortality reduced by intensive insulin therapy in critical care patients (including cardiac surgery) • Van Den Berghe et al., NEJM 2001

  30. IntraOp Glucose & Major Complications N=364 High-risk, open abdominal Surg TWA = time-weighted ave Primary outcome = composite of serious complications

  31. Glucose Concentrations Randomized Routine group = 145 ± 32 mg/dl Active group = 113 ± 19 mg/dl P < 0.001 No difference in composite of complications

  32. Aggressive Fluid Management • Volume management for colon resection • 30 vs. 50 ml/kg crystalloid • Tissue oxygenation in arm (n=56) • 81 ± 26 vs. 67 ± 18 mmHg, P = 0.03 • Arkilic, et al. Surgery 2003 • Similar wound infection risk (n=255) • 11.3 vs. 8.5%, P = 0.46 • Kabon, et al. Anesth Analg 2005 • Major limitations • Small study with low power • Fluid management not titrated to individual need

  33. Doppler-Guided Fluid Management • Speeds hospital discharge • Reduces composite complications • But does not reduce wound infection risk • Key citations • Gan, et al. Anesthesiology 2002 • Noblett, et al. Br J Surg 2006 • Wakeling, et al. Br J Anaesth 2005

  34. Summary 1 • Prophylactic antibiotics: • Give one hour before incision • Supplemental oxygen: • Does not cause atelectasis • Effect on surgical wound infection controversial • Maintaining normothermia: • Decreases wound infection risk 3-fold • Reduces the duration of hospitalization 20%

  35. Summary 2 • Red cell transfusions • Nearly doubles infection risk • Older blood worse than younger blood • Smoking: • Habitual smoking slightly increases risk • Effect of perioperative cessation on infection uncertain • Maintaining intraoperative glucose • Does not appear helpful in non-cardiac surgery • Unclear if helpful in cardiac surgery • Aggressive hydration does not appear to reduce infection risk • Doppler guidance improves outcomes

  36. Recommendations • Timely antibiotic administration • Consider giving 80% intraoperative oxygen • Maintain Normothermia • Forced-air • Fluid warming • Reduce red cell transfusions • Smoking • Not smoking lowers risk • Perioperative cessation might help • Euglycemia and aggressive hydration • Probably prudent, but not shown to reduce infection risk

  37. Department of OUTCOMESRESEARCH

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