5 - Surgical Prophylaxis Flashcards

1
Q

What is a surgical site infection?

A

Superficial or deep incisional or organ/space infection w/in 30 days of surgery or w/in 1 year of placement of prosthetic implant

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2
Q

What is important about surgical site infections?

A
  • Increase hospital stay
  • 5x re-admission
  • 2-3x mortality
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3
Q

What are the most important patient-related risk factors for SSIs?

A
  • Advanced age, obesity, malnutrition
  • Hypoxia associated w/ smoking or COPD
  • Diabetes, perioperative hyperglycemia
  • Immunocompromised (especially HIV or HCV)
  • Co-existing infection
  • Colonization w/ resident organism
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4
Q

What are the most important surgery-related risk factors for SSIs?

A
  • Infection control processes or sterilization and ventilation; equipment and technique
  • Surgical wound classification
  • Intraoperative thermoregulation, glucose control, O2 supplementation
  • Placement of foreign material
  • Duration and type of surgery
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5
Q

What is a clean surgical wound?

A
  • No mucosal incision or entry to respiratory, GI, or GU tracts
  • No inflammation/infection
  • Primarily closure
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6
Q

What is a clean-contaminated surgical wound?

A

Mucosal incision or entry to respiratory, GI, GU tract w/o unusual contamination

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7
Q

What is a contaminated surgical wound?

A
  • Acute wound/trauma
  • Non-purulent inflammation
  • Major break in sterile technique/ spillage
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8
Q

What is a dirty surgical wound?

A
  • Chronic wound
  • Perforated viscera
  • Purulent inflammation/ infection
  • Warrants antimicrobial therapy
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9
Q

What are the most common pathogens associated w/ SSIs?

A
  • Staph aureus
  • Streptococcus spp
  • CoNS, most commonly staph epidermidis
  • E. coli, Klebsiella, enterobacter, P. aeruginosa
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10
Q

When is E. coli most often associated w/ an SSI?

A

In urinary tract and gut surgeries

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11
Q

When is pseudomonas most often associated w/ an SSI?

A

Immunocompromised px previously on broad spectrum antibiotics

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12
Q

When is enterococcus most often associated w/ an SSI?

A

Immunocompromised pt w/ GI surgery (usually not pathogenic in wound infections unless the pt is immunocompromised)

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13
Q

What is the goal of antimicrobial prophylaxis for surgery?

A
  • Reduce bacterial burden at incision site
  • Prevent SSIs and associated pt morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs
  • Minimize collateral resistance (MRSA, ESBL, VRE)
  • Avoid antimicrobial-associated adverse effects including C. difficile
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14
Q

What are the optimal characteristics for antimicrobial prophylaxis for surgery?

A
  • Bactericidal w/ spectrum that covers most likely pathogens, but sufficiently narrow to minimize collateral resistance
  • PK to provide adequate tissue concentrations for duration of surgery from incision to closure
  • High safety profile
  • Cost effective
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15
Q

What are some institutional initiatives that may improve delivery of optimal antimicrobial prophylaxis for surgery?

A
  • Education
  • Standardized guidelines for timing of preoperative dose w/in 1 h of incision, re-dosing during surgery as required and limiting duration
  • Audits and reporting of performance, compliance and outcomes
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16
Q

Which antibiotics are the most commonly prescribed for surgical prophylaxis and why?

A
  • Cephalosporins

- Broad spectrum, favourable PK profile, low adverse effects, and low cost

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17
Q

What are some generalizations that can be made about the antibiotics used for surgical prophylaxis?

A
  • First gen cephalosporins (like cefazolin) are preferred choice (used when targeting skin microbes)
  • Vanco is used for procedures involving implantation of a prosthetic device in which the rate of MRSA is high
  • If MRSA risk is low and a beta-lactam allergy exists, clinda is used
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18
Q

What is important to remember during cardiac surgery?

A
  • Pt is attached to a bypass machine so the heart isn’t beating, which drastically increases the Vd of the pt
  • Should consider giving a higher dose, dosing more frequently, or using a continuous infusion
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19
Q

What are some disadvantages to vancomycin?

A
  • Broadest gram pos, so generally reserve for when it is really needed
  • Possibility of VRE or MRSA developing resistance
  • Minimum infusion time is 1h if giving 1g or less
20
Q

What is important to remember about aminoglycosides w/ respect to gram pos coverage?

A

Have gram pos coverage, but are never used alone; always used w/ another drug for synergy

21
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a clean head and neck procedure w/ prosthesis placement?

A
  • Cefazolin

- [Clindamycin +/- gentamicin] for allergy

22
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a clean-contaminated head and neck procedure w/ mucosal incision?

A
  • Cefazolin + metro for 24 h or less

- [Clindamycin + gentamicin} for allergy

23
Q

For antimicrobial prophylaxis, what should be considered when a guideline says +/- gentamicin?

A

Consider if gram neg pathogens are a concern based on local SSI surveillance data

24
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for thoracic procedures (ex: lobectomy, pneumonectomy, lung resection)?

A
  • Cefazolin

- [Clindamycin +/- gentamicin] or [Vancomycin +/- gentamicin] for allergy

25
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for open heart surgery?

A
  • Cefazolin for at least 24-48 h

- [Vancomycin +/- gentamicin] for allergy

26
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for cardiac device insertion?

A
  • Cefazolin

- [Vancomycin] for allergy

27
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a clean gastroduodenal procedure for high risk (what is considered high risk)?

A
  • High risk = cancer-related, obesity, decreased gastric acidity/ motility, obstruction, bleeding, perforation
  • Cefazolin
  • [Clindamycin + gentamicin] or [vancomycin + gentamicin]
28
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a clean-contaminated gastroduodenal procedure w/ entry into GI tract?

A
  • Cefazolin

- [Clindamycin + gentamicin] or [vancomycin + gentamicin]

29
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a small intestinal procedure?

A
  • Non-obstructed = cefazolin
  • Obstructed = cefazolin + metro
  • [Clindamycin + gentamicin] or [metro + gentamicin] for allergy of either obstructed or non
30
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a large intestinal procedure

A
  • Cefazolin + metro

- [Metro + gentamicin] for allergy

31
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for high risk biliary tract procedures (what is considered high risk)?

A
  • High risk = emergency, acute cholecystitis, prior biliary surgery <1 m, stones, obstruction, prothesis, > 70 y/o, DM, pregnancy
  • Cefazolin
  • [Clindamycin + gentamicin] or [metro + gentamicin]
32
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a caesarean delivery?

A
  • Elective = cefazolin
  • Emergency = cefazolin +/- azithromycin
  • [Clinda + gent] for allergy
33
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a hysterectomy?

A
  • Cefazolin
  • Cancer related = cefazolin + metro
  • [Clinda + gent] or [metro + gent] for allergy
34
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a hernioplasty (mesh) or herniorrhaphy (suture)?

A
  • Cefazolin

- [Clinda or vanco] for allergy

35
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a mastectomy (cancer-related) or other high risk?

A
  • Cefazolin

- [Clinda or vanco] for allergy

36
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for a high risk lower urinary tract instrumentation or an upper urinary tract instrumentation?

A
  • PO = ciprofloxacin or TMP-SMX
  • IV = cefazolin or (gentamicin +/- clinda)
  • No option for allergy
37
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for an open/ laparoscopic urinary tract procedure w/o entry into GU tract?

A
  • Cefazolin (consider adding gent for prosthesis placement)

- [Clinda or vanco]

38
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for an open/ laparoscopic urinary tract procedure w/ entry into GU tract?

A
  • Cefazolin +/- gent (consider adding gent for prosthesis placement and prostatectomy if prior antibiotics, hospitalization, biopsy-related infection, international travel)
  • [Cipro] or [gent + clinda]
39
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for all vascular procedures?

A
  • Cefazolin

- [Clinda +/- gent] or [vanco +/- gent]

40
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for orthopedic joint replacement, implantation, or fracture repair?

A
  • Cefazolin +/- gent for maximum 24 h (to prevent bone infection; consider adding gent for type 3 open fractures)
  • [Clinda +/- gent] or [vanco +/- gent]
41
Q

What is the antimicrobial prophylaxis for orthopedic lower limb amputation?

A
  • Cefazolin +/- metro for maximum 24 h

- [Clindamycin + gent] for allergy

42
Q

What is the preoperative dose of cefazolin for antimicrobial prophylaxis? When is re-dosing required?

A
  • 2g IV
  • 3g IV for 120 kg and over
  • Re-dose every 4 h
43
Q

What is the preoperative dose of clindamycin for antimicrobial prophylaxis? When is re-dosing required?

A
  • 900 mg IV

- Re-dose every 6 h

44
Q

What is the preoperative dose of gentamicin for antimicrobial prophylaxis? When is re-dosing required?

A
  • 3-5 mg/kg IV

- No re-dosing required b/c 5 mg/kg covers for at least 24 h

45
Q

What is the preoperative dose of metronidazole for antimicrobial prophylaxis? When is re-dosing required?

A
  • 500 mg IV

- No re-dosing

46
Q

What is the preoperative dose of vancomycin for antimicrobial prophylaxis? When is re-dosing required?

A
  • 15 mg/kg IV

- No re-dosing

47
Q

What should be considered when re-dosing antimicrobial surgical prophylaxis?

A
  • Re-dosing recommended if blood loss over 1500 mL or for prolonged procedures
  • May not be required if prolonged t1/2 due to reduced renal function