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Assessment of the effectiveness of weight-adjusted antibiotic administration, for reduced duration, in surgical prophylaxis of primary hip and knee arthroplasty.

Okoro, Tosan; Wan, Michael; Mukabeta, Takura Darlington; Malev, Ella; Gross, Marketa; Williams, Claudia; Manjra, Muhammad; Kuiper, Jan Herman; Murnaghan, John

Authors

Tosan Okoro

Michael Wan

Takura Darlington Mukabeta

Ella Malev

Marketa Gross

Claudia Williams

Muhammad Manjra

John Murnaghan



Abstract

Prophylactic antibiotics have significantly led to a reduction in the risk of post-operative surgical site infections (SSI) in orthopaedic surgery. The aim of using antibiotics for this purpose is to achieve serum and tissue drug levels that exceed, for the duration of the operation, the minimum inhibitory concentration of the likely organisms that are encountered. Prophylactic antibiotics reduce the rate of SSIs in lower limb arthroplasty from between 4% and 8% to between 1% and 3%. Controversy, however, still surrounds the optimal frequency and dosing of antibiotic administration. To evaluate the impact of introduction of a weight-adjusted antibiotic prophylaxis regime, combined with a reduction in the duration of administration of post-operative antibiotics on SSI incidence during the 2 years following primary elective total hip and knee arthroplasty. Following ethical approval, patients undergoing primary total hip arthroplasty (THA)/total knee arthroplasty (TKA) with the old regime (OR) of a preoperative dose [cefazolin 2 g intravenously (IV)], and two subsequent doses (2 h and 8 h), were compared to those after a change to a new regime (NR) of a weight-adjusted preoperative dose (cefazolin 2 g IV for patients < 120 kg; cefazolin 3g IV for patients > 120 kg) and a post-operative dose at 2 h. The primary outcome in both groups was SSI rates during the 2 years post-operatively. A total of = 1273 operations (THA = 534, TKA = 739) were performed in = 1264 patients. There was no statistically significant difference in the rate of deep (OR 0.74% (5/675) NR 0.50% (3/598); fishers exact test = 0.72), nor superficial SSIs (OR 2.07% (14/675) NR 1.50% (9/598); chi-squared test = 0.44) at 2 years post-operatively. With propensity score weighting and an interrupted time series analysis, there was also no difference in SSI rates between both groups [RR 0.88 (95%CI 0.61 to 1.30) = 0.46]. A weight-adjusted regime, with a reduction in number of post-operative doses had no adverse impact on SSI incidence in this population. [Abstract copyright: ©The Author(s) 2024. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.]

Citation

Okoro, T., Wan, M., Mukabeta, T. D., Malev, E., Gross, M., Williams, C., …Murnaghan, J. (in press). Assessment of the effectiveness of weight-adjusted antibiotic administration, for reduced duration, in surgical prophylaxis of primary hip and knee arthroplasty. World Journal of Orthopedics, 15(2), 170-179. https://doi.org/10.5312/wjo.v15.i2.170

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 5, 2024
Online Publication Date Feb 18, 2024
Deposit Date Apr 9, 2024
Journal World journal of orthopedics
Electronic ISSN 2218-5836
Publisher Baishideng Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 15
Issue 2
Pages 170-179
DOI https://doi.org/10.5312/wjo.v15.i2.170
Keywords Antibiotics, Surgical site infection, Weight-adjusted, Hip and knee arthroplasty