Abstract
Abstract
Background
Surgical site infection (SSI) in open surgical tracheostomy (ST) occurs in up to 33% of the cases. SSI can be reduced by a postoperative antibiotic prophylaxis (POAP). The effect of Clindamycin on SSIs in head and neck surgery (HNS) is discussed controversially in the literature.
Methods
An 8 year single-center retrospective comparative analysis of 441 STs (Visor-ST and Bjoerk-flap technique) performed within major HNS was evaluated due to the event of a SSI within 7 days and analyzed descriptively. Logistic regression model evaluated the impact of POAP with Clindamycin on SSIs.
Results
The use of Clindamycin showed twice the rate of ST-SSI as all patients that did not receive Clindamycin, treated with other perioperative antibiotics. (Fisher’s p = 0.008) The logistic regression model could not prove a statistically significant impact. (OR = 2.91, p = 0.04).
Conclusion
We recommend that Clindamycin should be reconsidered as a POAP regimen in ST. Further studies should evaluate alternatives for Penicillin-allergic patients.
Level of evidence III
Comparative retrospective monocentric study.
Funder
Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE)
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Medicine,Otorhinolaryngology
Cited by
5 articles.
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