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The effect of first- and third-generation prophylactic antibiotics on hospitalization and medical expenditures for cardiac surgery. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared the effectiveness of first-generation (cefazolin) and third-generation (ceftizoxime) antibiotics for preventing surgical site infections in adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
  • Results showed a significantly lower rate of deep surgical site infections in the first-generation group (5.7%) compared to the third-generation group (16.5%), along with shorter postoperative hospitalization and lower medical costs.
  • Overall, first-generation antibiotics were concluded to be more effective and cost-efficient than third-generation options in this surgical context.

Article Abstract

Background: This study investigated the efficacy of first-generation (cefazolin) and third-generation (ceftizoxime) prophylactic antibiotics in patients undergoing cardiac surgery and the incidence of surgical site infections, hospitalizations, and medical costs.

Methods: All adult patients (≥ 20 years) undergoing cardiac surgery at one hospital from January 01, 2009, to December 31, 2016, were included in this study. A single prophylactic antibiotic was administered at a dose of 1 g within one hour of the surgical incision and for three days after surgery at eight-hour intervals. After propensity score matching, 194 patients in each antibiotic prophylaxis group (first-generation vs third-generation) were analyzed. Among the 388 patients, the incidence of surgical site infections was compared according to the type of prophylactic antibiotic, and risk factors were evaluated by chi-squared tests followed by multivariate logistic regression analysis.

Results: The incidence of deep surgical site infections was significantly lower in the first-generation group (5.7%) than in the third-generation group (16.5%). The pathogens isolated from the surgical infection sites were similarly distributed in both groups. However, the prevalence of highly infectious gram-positive bacteria was more than that of gram-negative bacteria (67% vs 23%). The preoperative hospitalization duration, mean operation time, and ventilator use time were similar in both groups, but the postoperative hospitalization duration was significantly shorter in the first-generation group (25.5 days) than in the third-generation group (29.8 days). In addition, the medical costs were lower in the first-generation group (20,594 USD) than in the third-generation group (26,488 USD).

Conclusion: In conclusion, the first-generation prophylactic antibiotic was better than the third-generation in reducing surgical site infection rates, hospitalization length, and medical expenditures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8817574PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13019-022-01763-4DOI Listing

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