Conference Coverage

ESBL-B before colorectal surgery ups risk of surgical site infection


 

REPORTING FROM ECCMID 2018


This portion of R-GNOSIS was intended to investigate the relationship between ESBL-B carriage and postoperative surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients.

The study comprised 3,626 patients who were preoperatively screened for ESBL-B within 2 weeks of colorectal surgery. The ESBL-B carriage rate was 15.3% overall, but ranged from 12% to 20% by site. Of the carriers, 222 were included in this study sample. They were randomly matched with 444 noncarriers.

Anywhere from 2 weeks to 2 days before surgery, all of the patients received a standard prophylactic antibiotic. This was most often an infusion of 1.5 g cefuroxime plus 500 mg metronidazole. Other cephalosporins were allowed at the clinician’s discretion.

Patients were a mean of 62 years old. Nearly half (48%) had cardiovascular disease and about a third had undergone a prior colorectal surgical procedure. Cancer was the surgical indication in about 70%. Other indications were inflammatory bowel disease and diverticular disease.

Recommended Reading

Reported penicillin allergies hike inpatient costs
MDedge Internal Medicine
Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI
MDedge Internal Medicine
Prehospital antibiotics improved some aspects of sepsis care
MDedge Internal Medicine
Bile spillage during lap cholecystectomy comes with a price
MDedge Internal Medicine
Complication rates rise after decline in uterine fibroid morcellation
MDedge Internal Medicine
Robotic approach falls short for sleeve gastrectomy
MDedge Internal Medicine
Piperacillin-tazobactam tripled risk of death for patients with cephalosporin-resistant septicemia
MDedge Internal Medicine
ESBL-resistant bacteria spread in hospital despite strict contact precautions
MDedge Internal Medicine