ResearcherID - CLICK HERE Scientific Journal Impact Factor (SJIF-2020) - CLICK HERE

TITLE:

RISK FACTORS FOR SURGICAL SITE INFECTION AFTER CARDIAC SURGERY IN THE PAEDIATRIC AGE GROUP

AUTHORS:

Dr. Saad Bader Zakai, Dr. Abdul Sattar Sheikh, Dr. Aftab Ahmed Khatri, Dr. Iqbal Hussain Pathan, Dr. Marium Fatima Waqar, Dr. Shehzeen Nadeem, Rajab A Khokhar, Dr Sohail Khan Bangash

ABSTRACT:

Postoperative surgical site infections are a major cause of postoperative morbidity and mortality in cardiac surgery. While surgical site infection in adult cardiac surgery has been well characterized and studied, in paediatric cardiac surgery, the classification, prevention, and management is less well studied and significant practice variation exists. We performed a post hoc exploratory analysis of 980 children from birth to 36 months of age at the time of cardiac surgery who were randomized to postoperative TGC or STD in the intensive care unit. Significant interactions were observed between the treatment group and both neonates (age ≤30 days; P=0.03) and intraoperative glucocorticoid exposure (P=0.03) on the risk of infection. The rate and incidence of infections in subjects ≤60 days old were significantly increased in the TGC compared with the STD group (rate: 13.5 versus 3.7 infections per 1000 cardiac intensive care unit days, P=0.01; incidence: 13% versus 4%, P=0.02), whereas infections among those >60 days of age were significantly reduced in the TGC compared with the STD group (rate: 5.0 versus 14.1 infections per 1000 cardiac intensive care unit days, P=0.02; incidence: 2% versus 5%, P=0.03);The interaction of treatment group by age subgroup was highly significant (P=0.001). Multivariable logistic regression controlling for the main effects revealed that previous cardiac surgery, chromosomal anomaly, and delayed sternal closure were independently associated with increased risk of infection. This exploratory analysis demonstrated that TGC may lower the risk of infection in children >60 days of age at the time of cardiac surgery compared with children receiving STD. Meta-analyses of past and ongoing clinical trials are necessary to confirm these findings before clinical practice is altered. Keywords: Antibiotic prophylaxis, cardiac surgery, complications, morbidity, Readmissions.

Top
  • Follows us on
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.