AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the effectiveness of short-term single-shot antibiotic prophylaxis versus long-term prophylaxis in preventing infections following implant-based breast reconstruction.
  • Researchers analyzed data from two groups: one on long-term antibiotics (391 women) and one on short-term antibiotics with early drain removal (89 women).
  • Results showed no significant difference in overall infection or implant loss rates between the groups, but shorter drain removal times correlated with lower infection rates and better surgical outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Infective complications following implant-based breast reconstruction range from 2,5 to 24% and are often associated with high morbidity and poor outcome. Many authors still employ long-term antibiotic prophylaxis even though there is no conclusive evidence on the impact on infection-rate reduction. In the present study, we report we report our single-shot short-term prophylaxis protocol for surgical site infection prevention in immediate two-stage implant breast reconstruction.

Methods: We retrospectively compared clinical data from two groups of women undergoing immediate two-stage breast reconstruction with tissue expander. Group 1 (n = 391) was administered with long-term prophylaxis, and Group 2 (n = 89) was administered with short-term prophylaxis associated with early drains removal (21 days maximum). We evaluated risk factors for infection, clinical preoperative data, time before drain removal, and clinical feature of the diagnosed infections (early or late onset) and compared the reconstructive outcome between the two groups (infection rate, implant loss rate).

Results: We did not find any statistically significant difference in the infection rate (11,51% overall) and implant loss rate (4,49% overall) between the two groups. We found a difference in the implant loss to infection ratio (46.67% in group 1 and 20% in group 2, p < 0,05) and in the time before drain removal (19 days in group 1 and 15 days in group 2, p < 0.001). We finally found an association between prolonged time before drain removal and increased infection rate (p = 0.004).

Conclusions: Short-term single-shot perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis associated with early drain removal (within 21 days postop) represents a safe approach in terms of prevention of local infective surgical complication and allows a more effective treatment of the diagnosed SSI.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bjps.2020.12.016DOI Listing

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