Orthopaedic Surgery (Aug 2024)

Is Aggressive Surgery Always Necessary for Suspected Early‐Onset Surgical Site Infection after Lumbar Surgery? A 10‐Year Retrospective Analysis

  • Lin Zou,
  • Pengxiao Sun,
  • Weidong Chen,
  • Jiawei Shi,
  • Yujing Zhang,
  • Jintao Zhong,
  • Dongbin Qu,
  • Minghui Zheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/os.14106
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 8
pp. 1884 – 1892

Abstract

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Objective Surgical site infection (SSI) after spinal surgery is still a persistent worldwide health concern as it is a worrying and devastating complication. The number of samples in previous studies is limited and the role of conservative antibiotic therapy has not been established. This study aims to evaluate the clinical efficacy and feasibility of empirical antibiotic treatment for suspected early‐onset deep spinal SSI. Methods We conducted a retrospective study to identify all cases with suspected early‐onset deep SSI after lumbar instrumented surgery between January 2009 and December 2018. We evaluated the potential risks for antibiotic treatment, examined the antibiotic treatment failure rate, and applied logistic regression analysis to assess the risk factors for empirical antibiotic treatment failure. Results Over the past 10 years, 45 patients matched the inclusion criteria. The success rate of antibiotic treatment was 62.2% (28/45). Of the 17 patients who failed antibiotic treatment, 16 were cured after a debridement intervention and the remaining one required removal of the internal fixation before recovery. On univariate analysis, risk factors for antibiotic treatment failure included age, increasing or persisting back pain, wound dehiscence, localized swelling, and time to SSI (cut‐off: 10 days). Multivariate analysis revealed that infection occurring 10 days after primary surgery and wound dehiscence were independent risk factors for antibiotic treatment failure. Conclusion Appropriate antibiotic treatment is an alternative strategy for suspected early‐onset deep SSI after lumbar instrumented surgery. Antibiotic treatment for suspected SSI occurring within 10 days after primary surgery may improve the success rate of antibiotic intervention. Patients with wound dehiscence have a significantly higher likelihood of requiring surgical intervention.

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