Litcius/Paper detail

Risk factors for surgical site infection in free‐flap reconstructive surgery for head and neck cancer: Retrospective Australian cohort study

Peter F. Gearing, John F. Daly, Nicholas Tang, Kasha P. Singh, Anand Ramakrishnan

2021Head & Neck24 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Surgical site infections (SSI) are common complications of free-flap reconstruction for head and neck cancer defects. This study aimed to identify risk factors for SSI following a significant change in local antibiotic prophylaxis practice. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study was conducted of 325 patients receiving free-flap reconstruction for head and neck cancer defects at a tertiary hospital in Melbourne, Australia between 2013 and 2019. Charts were queried for recipient SSI (primary outcome), donor SSI, other infections, antibiotic use, hospital length of stay, and mortality. RESULTS: Risk factors for SSI included female sex, T-classification, hardware insertion, clindamycin prophylaxis, and operative duration. There was a trend toward increased SSI with shorter ≤24 h prophylaxis (OR: 0.43). CONCLUSION: Antibiotic duration and type were associated with SSI. Complexity of surgery, T-classification, hardware use, and operative duration were also independently associated with SSI. A prospective trial is indicated to elicit optimal prophylactic antibiotic duration.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHead and neck cancerRetrospective cohort studySurgeryAntibiotic prophylaxisCohortHead and neckCohort studyProspective cohort studyAntibioticsCancerInternal medicineRadiation therapyBiologyMicrobiologyReconstructive Surgery and Microvascular TechniquesSurgical site infection preventionHead and Neck Cancer Studies