Preoperative oral antibiotic administration in patients undergoing curative resection with stoma creation for colorectal cancer: effectiveness in preventing surgical site infection and the possibility of peristomal candidiasis induced by enterobacterial alteration

Author:

Kiuchi Jun1ORCID,Kuriu Yoshiaki1,Arita Tomohiro1ORCID,Shimizu Hiroki1ORCID,Nanishi Kenji1,Takaki Wataru1,Ohashi Takuma1,Konishi Hirotaka1,Yamamoto Yusuke1,Morimura Ryo1,Shiozaki Atsuishi1,Ikoma Hisashi1,Kubota Takeshi1,Fujiwara Hitoshi1,Otsuji Eigo1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Digestive Surgery, Department of Surgery Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine Kyoto Japan

Abstract

AbstractAimThere are many reports that preoperative oral antibiotics (OAs) are effective in preventing surgical site infections (SSIs) in colorectal surgery. However, there is no consensus on the optimal dose of OAs. In this study, we investigated the efficacy of OAs in preventing SSIs and the possibility that OAs induce enterobacterial alteration in the intestinal tract.MethodWe performed a retrospective cross‐sectional analysis of 389 patients who underwent R0 resection and stoma creation for colorectal cancer in our department between 2009 and 2020. We focused on the incidence of peristomal candidiasis (PSC) as an indicator of enterobacterial alteration and used kanamycin (KM) and metronidazole (MNZ) as the OAs. A low‐dose group received 1000 mg/day of both KM and MNZ, and a high‐dose group received 2000 mg/day of both KM and MNZ.ResultsSSI occurred in 60 of the 389 cases (15.4%). Regardless of stoma type, SSI was significantly more common in the non‐OA group, while PSC was significantly less common. When examined by OA dose, the incidence of SSI was not significantly different between the low‐dose and high‐dose groups. However, PSC was significantly more common in the high‐dose group than in the non‐OA and low‐dose groups. Analysis of bacterial and fungal levels in stool samples showed that bacterial levels after OAs were significantly lower than before OAs, while fungal levels increased.ConclusionOAs significantly reduce SSI in colorectal cancer surgery. However, excess OAs were significantly associated with the occurrence of PSC without contributing to further reduction in SSI.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Gastroenterology

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