From the Journals

Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI


 

FROM CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES


Overall, a total of 241 (2.7%) patients contracted an SSI. In a multivariate analysis, patients who had reported a penicillin allergy were 50% more likely to develop an SSI than those who had no reported allergy (adjusted odds ratio, 1.5; P = .04).

Risk may even be higher than 50% in the general health care population because this health center has a relatively low rate of SSIs, compared with many other hospitals, Dr. Blumenthal and her fellow investigators stated.

The increased risk primarily concerns the treatment used because those with a reported allergy were more likely than those without the allergy to be given clindamycin (48.8% vs. 3.1%, respectively), vancomycin (34.7% vs. 3.3%), gentamicin (24% vs. 2.8%), or fluoroquinolones (6.8% vs. 1.3%) instead of the most commonly used antibiotic, cefazolin (12.2% vs. 92.4%).

Patients given antibiotics other than cefazolin were usually given treatment outside of the perioperative window, which could severely increase the likelihood for developing an SSI, according to investigators. Of patients given vancomycin, 97.5% did not receive their treatment in the recommended time frame, compared with 1.7% of those given cefazolin.

Recommended Reading

Potential postthyroidectomy quality improvement metrics arise from study
MDedge Surgery
Gastrointestinal complications are a key risk factor for death after AEF repair
MDedge Surgery
MSQC quality recommendations improve SSI in colectomy patients
MDedge Surgery
Clinical Trial: The Checklist to Prevent MRSA Surgical Site Infections
MDedge Surgery
Predicting MDR Gram-negative infection mortality risk
MDedge Surgery
Reported penicillin allergies hike inpatient costs
MDedge Surgery
No link found between OR skullcaps and infection
MDedge Surgery
Morbid, super obesity raises laparoscopic VHR risk
MDedge Surgery
Postcesarean SSI rate declines with care bundle*
MDedge Surgery
Defining incisional hernia risk in IBD surgery
MDedge Surgery