Surgical site infections in pediatric spinal surgery after implementation of a quality assurance program
Study Design Retrospective cohort study. Objective To assess the effectiveness of two infection-reducing programs in mitigating the incidence of post-operative surgical site infections (SSI) in pediatric patients after spinal deformity surgery at our institution. Summary of background data Infection...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Spine deformity 2021, Vol.9 (1), p.125-133 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Study Design
Retrospective cohort study.
Objective
To assess the effectiveness of two infection-reducing programs in mitigating the incidence of post-operative surgical site infections (SSI) in pediatric patients after spinal deformity surgery at our institution.
Summary of background data
Infections following spinal deformity surgery are associated with higher morbidity as well as significantly increased healthcare costs. SSI in patients with neuromuscular etiologies is especially high, exceeding 8 percent for myelodysplasia patients and 6 percent for cerebral palsy patients.
Methods
Manual chart review was conducted for 1934 pediatric spine procedures in 1200 patients at our institution between 2008 and 2018. Patients between the ages of 0 and 21 having any spinal surgical procedure including lengthening of growing rods were included.
Results
Institution of two separate infection-reducing programs reduced risk of SSI in this population by 65.4%, when adjusted for age and number of instrumentation levels (risk ratio [RR] = 0.3, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.2; 0.6,
p
= 0.001). Patients undergoing Initial Instrumentation demonstrated 68.8% less risk of SSI compared to those who had other types of surgical procedures, after adjusting for age and the number of level instrumented (RR = 0.3, 95% CI 0.2; .6,
p
= 0.002). It was observed that the effect of each of these infection-reducing programs diminished with time. This effect was also observed with prior programs implemented at our institution.
Conclusion
The incidence of SSI decreased following the implementation of two infection-reducing programs especially in patients undergoing Initial Instrumentation procedures. However, time-series analysis suggests these programs may have maximal effect immediately following institution that diminishes with time.
Level of evidence
Level III. |
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ISSN: | 2212-134X 2212-1358 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s43390-020-00192-4 |