RISK FACTORS FOR WOUND INFECTIONS AFTER TOTAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in American Journal of Epidemiology
- Vol. 131 (5), 905-916
- https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a115580
Abstract
Wound infections are an infrequent but serious complication of total knee arthroplasty. Between January 1984 and November 1987, 20 of 243 (8.2%) patients at two affiliated hospitals developed surgical wound infections following 259 total knee arthroplasty procedures performed in clean-air operating rooms. Eighteen (90%) of the patients had deep infections nine required removal of the prosthesis. A single surgeon (surgeon X) was associated with 18 of the procedures that had subsequent infection (risk ratio (RR)=9.4, 95% confidence interval (Cl) 2.2–39), and an investigation was carried out in an effort to explain the difference in infection rates between surgeon X and other surgeons. In a cohort study, stratified analyses identified a preoperative American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status class ≥3, surgeon X, and early postoperative use of a continuous passive motion device as risk factors associated with surgical wound infection following total knee arthroplasty procedures. Logistic regression analyses identified being a patient operated on by surgeon X with an ASA class ≥3 as the only significant independent risk factor for total knee arthroplasty-associated surgical wound infections (RR=9.3, 95% Cl 2.8–31). The effect due to surgeon X could not be explained by receipt or timeliness of administration of antimicrobial prophylaxis, type of prosthesis inserted, duration of operation, postoperative use of continuous passive motion, or underlying etiology of joint disease. The authors conclude that surgical technique and patient's severity of illness were the primary determinants of surgical wound infection after total knee arthroplasty. This study demonstrates the complexity of epidemiologic investigation of surgical wound infections and the importance of considering patient severity of illness when interpreting surgeon-specific infection rates.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Surgical Wound Infections: Prospective Study of 4,468 Clean WoundsInfection Control, 1987
- Deep sepsis following total knee arthroplasty. Ten-year experience at the University of California at Los Angeles Medical Center.Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1986
- THE EFFICACY OF INFECTION SURVEILLANCE AND CONTROL PROGRAMS IN PREVENTING NOSOCOMIAL INFECTIONS IN US HOSPITALSAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1985
- IDENTIFYING PATIENTS AT HIGH RISK OF SURGICAL WOUND INFECTIONAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1985
- Surgical Wound InfectionsAnnals of Surgery, 1984
- Infection rates after 3175 total hip and total knee replacements performed with and without a horizontal unidirectional filtered air-flow system.Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1982
- PROPHYLACTIC CEFAZOLIN VERSUS PLACEBO IN TOTAL HIP REPLACEMENT Report of a Multicentre Double-blind Randomised TrialThe Lancet, 1981