Getting it right first time: national survey of surgical site infection 2019

Author:

Gatfield SA1,Atkinson KV2,Fountain D3,Machin JT4,Navaratnam AV5,Hutton M6,Briggs TWR4

Affiliation:

1. Musgrove Park Hospital, UK

2. The Royal London Hospital, UK

3. Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust and University of Manchester, UK

4. The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust, UK

5. University London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK

6. Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust, UK

Abstract

Introduction Surgical site infections (SSIs) are associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Deep SSI, or prosthetic joint infection (PJI), is associated with revision surgery involving longer operative times with higher infection rates, longer length of stay (LoS) and high costs in addition to the catastrophic effect on the patient. The surveillance of SSI is important for patient decision making, identification of outliers for support and maximising focussed improvement. This paper reports the findings of the second Getting it Right First Time (GIRFT) national SSI survey for orthopaedic and spinal surgery. Methods Data were submitted prospectively by 67 orthopaedic units and 22 spinal units between 1 May 2019 and 31 October 2019. For a patient to be included, they had to present with SSI within the study period and within 1 year of the index procedure. Results A total of 309 SSIs were reported from primary and revision, total hip, knee, shoulder, elbow and ankle replacements, and 58 SSIs were reported from lumbar spine single level discectomy or decompression, lumbar spine single-level instrumented posterior fusion, posterior cervical spine decompression and instrumented fusion and posterior correction of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. SSIs rates have remained low compared with the 2017 survey. There were variations in SSI rates by procedure, with primary shoulder replacement reporting the lowest (0.4%) and revision shoulder replacement the highest (2.5%) rates. Conclusions The authors recommend that the elective surgical restart following the COVID-19 pandemic provides a unique opportunity for all units to implement a full SSI prevention bundle to minimise the risk of infection and improve patient outcomes.

Publisher

Royal College of Surgeons of England

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

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