Impact of participation in a surgical site infection surveillance network: results from a large international cohort study.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
30529703
Description
INTRODUCTION
Surveillance of surgical site infections (SSI) is a core component of effective infection control practices, though its impact has not been quantified on a large scale. This study aims to determine the time-trend of SSI rates in surveillance networks.
METHODS
SSI surveillance networks provided procedure-specific data on numbers of SSIs and operations, stratified by hospitals' year of participation in the surveillance, to capture length of participation as an exposure. Pooled and procedure-specific random-effects Poisson regression was performed to obtain yearly rate ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI), and including surveillance network as random intercept.
RESULTS
Of 36 invited networks, 17 networks from 15 high-income countries across Europe, Asia and Australasia participated in the study. Aggregated data on 17 surgical procedures (cardio-vascular, digestive, gynaecologic-obstetrical, neurosurgical, and orthopaedic) were collected, resulting in data concerning 5,831,737 operations and 113,166 SSIs. There was a significant decrease in overall SSI rates over surveillance time resulting in a 35% reduction at the ninth (final) included year of surveillance (RR 0.65; 95% CI 0.63-0.67). There were large variations across procedure-specific trends, but strong consistent decreases were observed for colorectal surgery, herniorrhaphy, Caesarean section, hip prosthesis, and knee prosthesis.
CONCLUSION
In this large, international cohort study, pooled SSI rates showed a were associated with a stable and sustainable decrease after joining a SSI surveillance network; a causal relationship is possible, although unproven. There was heterogeneity in procedure-specific trends. These findings support the pivotal role of surveillance in reducing infection rates and call for widespread implementation of hospital-based SSI surveillance in high-income countries.
Surveillance of surgical site infections (SSI) is a core component of effective infection control practices, though its impact has not been quantified on a large scale. This study aims to determine the time-trend of SSI rates in surveillance networks.
METHODS
SSI surveillance networks provided procedure-specific data on numbers of SSIs and operations, stratified by hospitals' year of participation in the surveillance, to capture length of participation as an exposure. Pooled and procedure-specific random-effects Poisson regression was performed to obtain yearly rate ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI), and including surveillance network as random intercept.
RESULTS
Of 36 invited networks, 17 networks from 15 high-income countries across Europe, Asia and Australasia participated in the study. Aggregated data on 17 surgical procedures (cardio-vascular, digestive, gynaecologic-obstetrical, neurosurgical, and orthopaedic) were collected, resulting in data concerning 5,831,737 operations and 113,166 SSIs. There was a significant decrease in overall SSI rates over surveillance time resulting in a 35% reduction at the ninth (final) included year of surveillance (RR 0.65; 95% CI 0.63-0.67). There were large variations across procedure-specific trends, but strong consistent decreases were observed for colorectal surgery, herniorrhaphy, Caesarean section, hip prosthesis, and knee prosthesis.
CONCLUSION
In this large, international cohort study, pooled SSI rates showed a were associated with a stable and sustainable decrease after joining a SSI surveillance network; a causal relationship is possible, although unproven. There was heterogeneity in procedure-specific trends. These findings support the pivotal role of surveillance in reducing infection rates and call for widespread implementation of hospital-based SSI surveillance in high-income countries.
Date of Publication
2019-07
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Abbas, Mohamed | |
de Kraker, Marlieke Ea | |
Astagneau, Pascal | |
Aupee, Martine | |
Behnke, Michael | |
Bull, Ann | |
Choi, Hee Jung | |
de Greeff, Sabine C | |
Elgohari, Suzanne | |
Gastmeier, Petra | |
Harrison, Wendy | |
Koek, Mayke Bg | |
Lamagni, Theresa | |
Limon-Cáceres, Enric | |
Løwer, Hege Line | |
Lyytikäinen, Outi | |
Marimuthu, Kalisvar | |
Marquess, John | |
McCann, Rebecca | |
Prantner, Ida | |
Presterl, Elisabeth | |
Pujol, Miquel | |
Reilly, Jacqui | |
Roberts, Christopher | |
Lusignani, Luigi Segagni | |
Si, Damin | |
Szilágyi, Emese | |
Tanguy, Juliette | |
Tempone, Simone | |
Troillet, Nicolas | |
Worth, Leon | |
Pittet, Didier | |
Harbarth, Stephan |
Additional Credits
Series
Journal of hospital infection
Publisher
Elsevier
ISSN
0195-6701
Access(Rights)
open.access