Risk factors for surgical site infection following craniotomy: a 10-year retrospective cohort study

Dejavniki tveganja za pojav okužbe po kraniotomiji: 10-letna retrospektivna kohortna študija

Authors

  • Hojka Rowbottom University of Maribor, Faculty of Medicine , Univerza v Mariboru, Medicinska fakulteta Author
  • Borut Hribernik General and Teaching Hospital Celje, Department of Traumatology , Splošna bolnišnica Celje, Travmatološki oddelek Author
  • Janez Ravnik University of Maribor, Faculty of Medicine; University Medical Centre Maribor, Clinic for Surgery, Department of Neurosurgery , Univerza v Mariboru, Medicinska fakulteta; Univerzitetni klinični center Maribor, Klinika za kirurgijo, Oddelek za nevrokirurgijo Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18690/actabiomed.228

Keywords:

craniotomy, risk factors, surgical site infection

Abstract

Purpose: A craniotomy is a common surgical procedure with complications, including a surgical site infection after craniotomy (SSI-CRAN), for which risk factors are ill-defined. Therefore, we determined the risk factors for developing an SSI-CRAN in adult patients at a university hospital in Maribor.
Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted to compare patients with an SSI-CRAN (n=66) against a control group (n=70) from January 2009 to August 2019. We collected data from patients in who elective craniotomy had been performed and required surgical treatment for an infection.
Results: A total of 1192 patients underwent a craniotomy, of whom 66 (5.5%) developed an SSI-CRAN. The most common infections were osteomyelitis (66.7%) and epidural abscesses (63.6%). The most frequent causative organism was Propionibacterium acnes (54.5%). Based on Fisher’s exact test, the factors associated with an SSI-CRAN compared to the control group were use of Surgicel® (89.4% vs. 67.1%, p=0.0019), use of dural substitutes (53% vs. 27.1%, p=0.0028), use of adhesive dura (13.9% vs. 2.9%, p=0.0274), sutures used for skin closure (69.7% vs. 34.3%, p=0.0001), a frontal craniotomy (28.8% vs. 12.9%,
p=0.0328), and postoperative administration of glucocorticosteroids (73.7% vs. 54.4%, p=0.04).
Conclusion: We identified risk factors associated with SSIs-CRAN, for which alternatives exist that could reduce the incidence of SSIs-CRAN.

Author Biographies

  • Hojka Rowbottom, University of Maribor, Faculty of Medicine, Univerza v Mariboru, Medicinska fakulteta

    Maribor, Slovenija.

  • Borut Hribernik, General and Teaching Hospital Celje, Department of Traumatology, Splošna bolnišnica Celje, Travmatološki oddelek

    Celje, Slovenia.

  • Janez Ravnik, University of Maribor, Faculty of Medicine; University Medical Centre Maribor, Clinic for Surgery, Department of Neurosurgery, Univerza v Mariboru, Medicinska fakulteta; Univerzitetni klinični center Maribor, Klinika za kirurgijo, Oddelek za nevrokirurgijo

    Maribor, Slovenia.

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Published

11.09.2022

Issue

Section

Clinical Study

How to Cite

Rowbottom, H. ., Hribernik, B. ., & Ravnik, J. . (2022). Risk factors for surgical site infection following craniotomy: a 10-year retrospective cohort study: Dejavniki tveganja za pojav okužbe po kraniotomiji: 10-letna retrospektivna kohortna študija. Acta Medico-Biotechnica, 15(1), 10-21. https://doi.org/10.18690/actabiomed.228

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