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Oral Antibiotics Reduce SSIs After Colorectal Resection

The administration of oral antibiotics prior to elective colorectal resections is associated with significantly reduced infection rates, based on data from more than 9,000 patients.

Surgical-site infection remains a problem in colorectal resections, said Dr. Jamie A. Cannon of the department of surgery at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. To assess the value of oral antibiotics as part of the surgery preparation, Dr. Cannon and colleagues reviewed data from 9,940 patients from VASQIP (Veterans’ Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program) who underwent colorectal resections between 2005 and 2009. The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons.

After controlling for multiple variables, the researchers found that patients who had an oral antibiotic along with their mechanical bowel prep had a 57% reduction in risk of surgical-site infection.

A total of 1,978 patients had no bowel prep prior to their colorectal resections, 3,839 had mechanical prep only, 723 had only oral antibiotics, and 3,400 had mechanical and oral prep. The rate of surgical-site infections in the oral and mechanical prep group was 9%, which was similar to the rate of those who only received oral antibiotics (8%), and significantly lower than the rates of both the no-prep (18%) and mechanical prep–only (20%) groups.

The timely administration of an appropriate parenteral antibiotic (SCIP-1, the first measure in the Surgical Care Improvement Project) was associated with a modest risk reduction, but no notable effects were seen from other SCIP measures, the researchers said.

They noted that decisions about the use of oral antibiotics and mechanical bowel prep were based on retrospective prescription data, and they could not determine the timing of actual administration. However, they believed that their results strongly suggest that preoperative oral antibiotics should be administered for elective colorectal resections.

"The efficacy of preoperative oral antibiotics in reducing surgical site infections, with or without a mechanical preparation, should be further studied in a randomized trial," they concluded.

Dr. Cannon had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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oral antibiotics, prior to elective colorectal resections, reduced infection rates, Surgical-site infection, colorectal resections, Dr. Jamie A. Cannon, oral antibiotics, VASQIP, Veterans’ Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program, American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, mechanical bowel prep,
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The administration of oral antibiotics prior to elective colorectal resections is associated with significantly reduced infection rates, based on data from more than 9,000 patients.

Surgical-site infection remains a problem in colorectal resections, said Dr. Jamie A. Cannon of the department of surgery at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. To assess the value of oral antibiotics as part of the surgery preparation, Dr. Cannon and colleagues reviewed data from 9,940 patients from VASQIP (Veterans’ Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program) who underwent colorectal resections between 2005 and 2009. The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons.

After controlling for multiple variables, the researchers found that patients who had an oral antibiotic along with their mechanical bowel prep had a 57% reduction in risk of surgical-site infection.

A total of 1,978 patients had no bowel prep prior to their colorectal resections, 3,839 had mechanical prep only, 723 had only oral antibiotics, and 3,400 had mechanical and oral prep. The rate of surgical-site infections in the oral and mechanical prep group was 9%, which was similar to the rate of those who only received oral antibiotics (8%), and significantly lower than the rates of both the no-prep (18%) and mechanical prep–only (20%) groups.

The timely administration of an appropriate parenteral antibiotic (SCIP-1, the first measure in the Surgical Care Improvement Project) was associated with a modest risk reduction, but no notable effects were seen from other SCIP measures, the researchers said.

They noted that decisions about the use of oral antibiotics and mechanical bowel prep were based on retrospective prescription data, and they could not determine the timing of actual administration. However, they believed that their results strongly suggest that preoperative oral antibiotics should be administered for elective colorectal resections.

"The efficacy of preoperative oral antibiotics in reducing surgical site infections, with or without a mechanical preparation, should be further studied in a randomized trial," they concluded.

Dr. Cannon had no financial conflicts to disclose.

The administration of oral antibiotics prior to elective colorectal resections is associated with significantly reduced infection rates, based on data from more than 9,000 patients.

Surgical-site infection remains a problem in colorectal resections, said Dr. Jamie A. Cannon of the department of surgery at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. To assess the value of oral antibiotics as part of the surgery preparation, Dr. Cannon and colleagues reviewed data from 9,940 patients from VASQIP (Veterans’ Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program) who underwent colorectal resections between 2005 and 2009. The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons.

After controlling for multiple variables, the researchers found that patients who had an oral antibiotic along with their mechanical bowel prep had a 57% reduction in risk of surgical-site infection.

A total of 1,978 patients had no bowel prep prior to their colorectal resections, 3,839 had mechanical prep only, 723 had only oral antibiotics, and 3,400 had mechanical and oral prep. The rate of surgical-site infections in the oral and mechanical prep group was 9%, which was similar to the rate of those who only received oral antibiotics (8%), and significantly lower than the rates of both the no-prep (18%) and mechanical prep–only (20%) groups.

The timely administration of an appropriate parenteral antibiotic (SCIP-1, the first measure in the Surgical Care Improvement Project) was associated with a modest risk reduction, but no notable effects were seen from other SCIP measures, the researchers said.

They noted that decisions about the use of oral antibiotics and mechanical bowel prep were based on retrospective prescription data, and they could not determine the timing of actual administration. However, they believed that their results strongly suggest that preoperative oral antibiotics should be administered for elective colorectal resections.

"The efficacy of preoperative oral antibiotics in reducing surgical site infections, with or without a mechanical preparation, should be further studied in a randomized trial," they concluded.

Dr. Cannon had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Oral Antibiotics Reduce SSIs After Colorectal Resection
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Oral Antibiotics Reduce SSIs After Colorectal Resection
Legacy Keywords
oral antibiotics, prior to elective colorectal resections, reduced infection rates, Surgical-site infection, colorectal resections, Dr. Jamie A. Cannon, oral antibiotics, VASQIP, Veterans’ Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program, American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, mechanical bowel prep,
Legacy Keywords
oral antibiotics, prior to elective colorectal resections, reduced infection rates, Surgical-site infection, colorectal resections, Dr. Jamie A. Cannon, oral antibiotics, VASQIP, Veterans’ Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program, American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons, mechanical bowel prep,
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Major Finding: Patients who had an oral antibiotic as part of their bowel prep had a 57% reduction in risk of surgical site infections after elective colorectal resections.

Data Source: The data come from a review of 9,940 patients in a Veterans’ Affairs database

Disclosures: Dr. Cannon had no financial conflicts to disclose.