From the Journals

Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI


 

FROM CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES

Patients with reported penicillin allergies are significantly more likely to develop surgical site infections, according to a study conducted at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

With new evidence reporting 90%-99% of patients with a reported allergy are not actually allergic, conducting a preoperative allergy test could improve treatment choice and decrease the risk of SSI, as well as the notable financial burden associated with it. Thus, “systematic, preoperative penicillin allergy evaluations in surgical patients may not only improve antibiotic choice but also decrease SSI risk,” according to Kimberly Blumenthal, MD, the quality director for the department of allergy and immunology at Massachusetts General Hospital, and her fellow investigators.

penicillium Thinkstock
Their retrospective study included 8,385 patients admitted to Massachusetts General Hospital during 2010-2014. The average age was 64 years, the majority were white (85%), and 22.9% of patients in the study were diagnosed with cardiovascular disease.

Surgeries performed were hip arthroplasty, knee arthroplasty, hysterectomy, colon surgery, or coronary artery bypass grafting.

Of the patients studied, 922 (11%) reported a penicillin allergy; most had minor reactions, such as rashes (37.5%) or urticaria (18%). “Only 5 reactions to penicillin represented contraindications to receiving a beta-lactam; the vast majority of patients would have tolerated first-line recommended cephalosporin prophylaxis had allergy evaluation been pursued,“ according to Dr. Blumenthal and her colleagues.

Pages

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: Dual antibiotic prophylaxis cuts cesarean SSIs
MDedge Infectious Disease
VA cohort study: Individualize SSI prophylaxis based on patient factors
MDedge Infectious Disease
Postsurgical antibiotics cut infection in obese women after C-section
MDedge Infectious Disease
VIDEO: Researchers beginning to explore microbiome’s effect on surgical outcomes
MDedge Infectious Disease
Some measures to control HAI sound better than they perform
MDedge Infectious Disease
Strict OR attire policy had no impact on SSI rate
MDedge Infectious Disease
Type of headwear worn during surgery had no impact on SSI rates
MDedge Infectious Disease
Clinical Trial: The Checklist to Prevent MRSA Surgical Site Infections
MDedge Infectious Disease
Predicting MDR Gram-negative infection mortality risk
MDedge Infectious Disease
Reported penicillin allergies hike inpatient costs
MDedge Infectious Disease