Efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgery
Background: The discovery of penicillin marked a paradigm shift in medicine with the ability to treat previously life-threatening infections. Increasing antibiotic resistance as well as the risk of adverse reactions to antibiotics, however, creates pressures for judicious use. There continues to be...
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Format: | Article |
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Elsevier
2024-06-01
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Series: | JPRAS Open |
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Online Access: | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587824000172 |
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author | Julia Toman J. Zachary Porterfield Michael W Randall Ambuj Kumar Edward H Farrior |
author_facet | Julia Toman J. Zachary Porterfield Michael W Randall Ambuj Kumar Edward H Farrior |
author_sort | Julia Toman |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Background: The discovery of penicillin marked a paradigm shift in medicine with the ability to treat previously life-threatening infections. Increasing antibiotic resistance as well as the risk of adverse reactions to antibiotics, however, creates pressures for judicious use. There continues to be debate about the role of prophylactic antibiotics in facial plastic surgery. This study explores the role of prophylactic antibiotic administration in elective outpatient facial plastic surgery by comparing 5 days versus 24 hours of antibiotic prophylaxis. Method: A retrospective cohort study of all consecutive patients undergoing cosmetic procedures at an outpatient facial plastic surgical center who received either 5 days or 24 hours of prophylactic antibiotics was performed. The primary outcome was the need for postoperative antibiotics within 6 weeks of surgery. Results: 204 patients met the inclusion criteria: 104 in the 5-day group and 100 in the 24-hour prophylaxis group. The overall infection rate was 3.4%: 3% in the 24-hour group and 3.8% in the 5-day group (p = 0.77). Subgroup analysis of clean-contaminated cases (n = 85) showed the rate of postoperative infections was 4.3%, all within the 5-day group. In clean cases (n = 119), the rate of postoperative infections was 4.2% (n = 5): 4.8% (n = 3) in the 24-hour group versus 3.5% (n = 2) in the 5-day group. Conclusions: The results show that decreasing the duration of antibiotics was not associated with an increased risk of postoperative infection. Given that antibiotics are an increasingly precious commodity with rising rates of resistance, this study supports the use of decreasing postoperative antibiotics to 24 hours. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-07T21:28:32Z |
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id | doaj.art-2336b495431b4915989045c868e090ac |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2352-5878 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-07T21:28:32Z |
publishDate | 2024-06-01 |
publisher | Elsevier |
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series | JPRAS Open |
spelling | doaj.art-2336b495431b4915989045c868e090ac2024-02-27T04:19:55ZengElsevierJPRAS Open2352-58782024-06-01406876Efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgeryJulia Toman0J. Zachary Porterfield1Michael W Randall2Ambuj Kumar3Edward H Farrior4University of South Florida, Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery Division Facial Plastics and Reconstructive Surgery Morsani College of Medicine; Corresponding author: Julia Toman, MD, 12901 Bruce B. Downs Blvd – MDC73 Tampa, Florida, 33612, Phone: 813-974-4683; Fax: 813-974-7314University of South Florida, Department of Internal Medicine - Division of Infectious Diseases & International Medicine; University of KwaZulu-Natal, Department of Otorhinolaryngology School of Clinical MedicineUniversity of South Florida, Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery Division Facial Plastics and Reconstructive Surgery Morsani College of MedicineUniversity of South Florida, Department of Internal Medicine Morsani College of MedicineFarrior Plastic Surgery, Tampa, FloridaBackground: The discovery of penicillin marked a paradigm shift in medicine with the ability to treat previously life-threatening infections. Increasing antibiotic resistance as well as the risk of adverse reactions to antibiotics, however, creates pressures for judicious use. There continues to be debate about the role of prophylactic antibiotics in facial plastic surgery. This study explores the role of prophylactic antibiotic administration in elective outpatient facial plastic surgery by comparing 5 days versus 24 hours of antibiotic prophylaxis. Method: A retrospective cohort study of all consecutive patients undergoing cosmetic procedures at an outpatient facial plastic surgical center who received either 5 days or 24 hours of prophylactic antibiotics was performed. The primary outcome was the need for postoperative antibiotics within 6 weeks of surgery. Results: 204 patients met the inclusion criteria: 104 in the 5-day group and 100 in the 24-hour prophylaxis group. The overall infection rate was 3.4%: 3% in the 24-hour group and 3.8% in the 5-day group (p = 0.77). Subgroup analysis of clean-contaminated cases (n = 85) showed the rate of postoperative infections was 4.3%, all within the 5-day group. In clean cases (n = 119), the rate of postoperative infections was 4.2% (n = 5): 4.8% (n = 3) in the 24-hour group versus 3.5% (n = 2) in the 5-day group. Conclusions: The results show that decreasing the duration of antibiotics was not associated with an increased risk of postoperative infection. Given that antibiotics are an increasingly precious commodity with rising rates of resistance, this study supports the use of decreasing postoperative antibiotics to 24 hours.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587824000172Facial plastic surgeryAntibiotic prophylaxisPostoperative infectionAntibiotic stewardship |
spellingShingle | Julia Toman J. Zachary Porterfield Michael W Randall Ambuj Kumar Edward H Farrior Efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgery JPRAS Open Facial plastic surgery Antibiotic prophylaxis Postoperative infection Antibiotic stewardship |
title | Efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgery |
title_full | Efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgery |
title_fullStr | Efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgery |
title_full_unstemmed | Efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgery |
title_short | Efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgery |
title_sort | efficacy of 24 hours versus 5 days of prophylactic antibiotics for the prevention of surgical site infection in outpatient elective facial plastic surgery |
topic | Facial plastic surgery Antibiotic prophylaxis Postoperative infection Antibiotic stewardship |
url | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352587824000172 |
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