Litcius/Paper detail

Aseptic versus clean technique during wound management? Systematic review with meta-analysis

Edward Purssell, Rose Gallagher, Dinah Gould

2023International Journal of Environmental Health Research11 citationsDOI

Abstract

The management of wounds by health professionals usually involves aseptic technique. An alternative is the use of clean techniques where the risk of infection is minimised but use of non-sterile materials is considered permissible. This systematic review and meta-analysis compares these two approaches. Nine studies met the inclusion criteria. Overall risk of bias was judged to be low. The random-effects relative risk of infection for clean dressings rather than aseptic dressings was 0.86 (95% CI 0.67, 1.12). There was little evidence of statistical heterogeneity, although the small number of infections in either group resulted in wide confidence intervals. The 95% prediction interval for future studies was 0.63, 1.18. There was therefore no evidence showing inferiority of clean techniques compared to aseptic methods. Before clinical studies are undertaken with higher risk procedures, laboratory simulations should explore safety by investigating the potential for pathogen transmission at each stage in the dressing procedure.

Topics & Concepts

Meta-analysisAseptic processingMedicineRelative riskConfidence intervalIntensive care medicineAsepsisStatistical analysisSurgeryRisk analysis (engineering)PathologyInternal medicineStatisticsMathematicsWound Healing and TreatmentsPressure Ulcer Prevention and ManagementSurgical site infection prevention