Conference Coverage

Ertapenem slashes surgical site infections in carriers of ESBL-producing bacteria


 

REPORTING FROM ECCMID 2018


In an analysis that controlled for National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance score and colon dilation, patients who received ertapenem were 41% less likely to develop any surgical site infection (15.8% vs. 22.7%; odds ratio, 0.59); 17% less likely to develop a deep infection (9.5% vs. 11.3%; OR, 0.83); and 87% less likely to develop an infection caused by an ESBL-producing bacteria (0.9% vs. 6.5%; OR, 0.13).

Dr. Nutman made no financial declarations.

SOURCE: Nutman et al. ECCMID 2018, Abstract O1129.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI
MDedge Surgery
Prehospital antibiotics improved some aspects of sepsis care
MDedge Surgery
No clear winner in Pfannenstiel vs. vertical incision for high BMI cesareans
MDedge Surgery
Bile spillage during lap cholecystectomy comes with a price
MDedge Surgery
Smokers face higher infection risk after hernia operations
MDedge Surgery
Wound protectors lower risk of surgical site infections
MDedge Surgery
How complications drive post-surgery spending upward
MDedge Surgery
Complication rates rise after decline in uterine fibroid morcellation
MDedge Surgery
Enhanced recovery led to fewer complications for major oncologic procedures
MDedge Surgery
Robotic approach falls short for sleeve gastrectomy
MDedge Surgery