Affiliation:
1. Department of Clinical Surgery, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
2. Department of Colorectal Surgery, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, UK
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
Surgical site infections (SSI) complicate 2%–10% of general surgery cases, and represent a significant burden on acute healthcare services. We aim to investigate if a smartphone-delivered wound assessment tool results in earlier treatment.
Method
This parallel, single-blinded randomised control trial enrolled adult emergency abdominal surgery patients in two tertiary hospitals (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02704897). Patients were randomised (1:1 ratio) between standard postoperative care and additional access to a smartphone-delivered wound assessment tool for 30-days postoperatively. Patients routinely submitted wound questionnaires and photos for surgical review at postoperative days 3, 7, and 15. The primary outcome measure was time-to-diagnosis of SSI (CDC definition) within 30 postoperative days.
Result
492 patients undergoing emergency surgery were randomised (smartphone intervention = 223; standard care = 269). There was no significant difference (P = 0.513) in the 30-day SSI rate between trial arms: 21 (9.4%) in smartphone vs 20 (7.4%) in standard care. While the mean time-to-diagnosis of SSI was 9.3 days (SD = 6.3) in the smartphone group, and 11.8 days (SD = 6.7) in the control group, this did not demonstrate a significant difference for the primary outcome (P = 0.255). However, patients in the smartphone group had 3.7-fold higher odds to be diagnosed in first 7 postoperative days (95% CI: 1.02 to 13.51, P = 0.043).
Conclusion
Digital patient-driven postoperative wound follow-up can be feasibly delivered in a broad cohort of emergency surgery patients. This can facilitate triage of patients to the appropriate level of assessment required, allowing diagnosis of SSI earlier in the postoperative period.
Take-home Message
Digital patient-driven postoperative wound follow-up can be feasibly delivered in a broad cohort of emergency surgery patients. This can facilitate triage of patients to the appropriate level of assessment required, allowing diagnosis of SSI earlier in the postoperative period.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
2 articles.
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