Antibiotic treatment of hand wounds in children: Contribution of a decision tree

IF 0.9 4区 医学 Q4 ORTHOPEDICS Hand Surgery & Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2024-04-01 DOI:10.1016/j.hansur.2024.101678
Céline Klein , Alexandrine Borowski , Matthieu Miclo , Marie-Christine Plancq , Pierre Tourneux , Richard Gouron
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Abstract

Background

The need for prophylactic antibiotic treatment of hand wounds in children requiring emergency surgical exploration is still controversial. Our starting hypothesis was that the absence of prophylactic antibiotic treatment in this setting (as specified by a decision tree) does not increase the likelihood of surgical site infection.

Methods

A decision tree for antibiotic prescription was developed by a working group in compliance with the guidelines issued by the French High Authority for Health, as part of a clinical pathway. One injection of intravenous antibiotics was prescribed for bite injuries, open joint injuries, injuries left untreated for more than 24 h, and suspected contaminated wounds. All children admitted for surgical treatment of a hand wound between July 2018 and March 2023 were included. Demographic data, antibiotic prescription and onset of postoperative surgical site infection were recorded.

Results

The 238 children included had a mean age of 8 ± 4.8 years; 102 received antibiotics and 136 did not. Eleven children (4.6%) had superficial surgical site infection requiring no revision surgery or antibiotic therapy. 206 children (86.5%) were treated following the decision tree. Ten had superficial surgical site infection: 3 received antibiotics (3.7% of the 80 who were treated) and 7 did not (5.5% of the 126 not treated) (p = 0.74). Thirty-two patients (13.5%) were off-protocol, only 1 of whom received antibiotics for superficial surgical site infection.

Discussion

Applying the decision tree standardized the prescription of antibiotics in hand wounds, was not associated with a significantly greater rate of surgical site infection, and avoided exposure to antibiotics for 61.1% of the children, thus limiting potential adverse events.

Level of evidence

III.

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儿童手部伤口的抗生素治疗:决策树的贡献。
背景:对于需要紧急手术探查的儿童手部伤口是否需要预防性抗生素治疗仍存在争议。我们最初的假设是,在这种情况下不进行预防性抗生素治疗(如决策树规定的那样)不会增加手术部位感染的可能性:抗生素处方决策树由一个工作小组根据法国卫生高级管理局发布的指南制定,作为临床路径的一部分。对于咬伤、开放性关节损伤、超过24小时未处理的损伤以及疑似污染伤口,处方为静脉注射一针抗生素。所有在 2018 年 7 月至 2023 年 3 月期间因手部伤口手术治疗而入院的儿童均被纳入其中。记录了人口统计学数据、抗生素处方和术后手术部位感染的发病情况:纳入的 238 名儿童平均年龄为(8 ± 4.8)岁;102 名接受了抗生素治疗,136 名未接受治疗。11名患儿(4.6%)出现了手术部位表皮感染,无需进行翻修手术或抗生素治疗。206名患儿(86.5%)按照决策树进行了治疗。10名患儿出现浅表性手术部位感染:3人接受了抗生素治疗(占接受治疗的80人的3.7%),7人未接受抗生素治疗(占未接受治疗的126人的5.5%)(P = 0.74)。32名患者(13.5%)不在协议范围内,其中只有1名患者因浅表手术部位感染接受了抗生素治疗:讨论:应用决策树可规范手部伤口的抗生素处方,与显著增加手术部位感染率无关,并避免了61.1%的患儿接触抗生素,从而限制了潜在的不良事件:证据等级:III。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
27.30%
发文量
0
审稿时长
49 days
期刊介绍: As the official publication of the French, Belgian and Swiss Societies for Surgery of the Hand, as well as of the French Society of Rehabilitation of the Hand & Upper Limb, ''Hand Surgery and Rehabilitation'' - formerly named "Chirurgie de la Main" - publishes original articles, literature reviews, technical notes, and clinical cases. It is indexed in the main international databases (including Medline). Initially a platform for French-speaking hand surgeons, the journal will now publish its articles in English to disseminate its author''s scientific findings more widely. The journal also includes a biannual supplement in French, the monograph of the French Society for Surgery of the Hand, where comprehensive reviews in the fields of hand, peripheral nerve and upper limb surgery are presented. Organe officiel de la Société française de chirurgie de la main, de la Société française de Rééducation de la main (SFRM-GEMMSOR), de la Société suisse de chirurgie de la main et du Belgian Hand Group, indexée dans les grandes bases de données internationales (Medline, Embase, Pascal, Scopus), Hand Surgery and Rehabilitation - anciennement titrée Chirurgie de la main - publie des articles originaux, des revues de la littérature, des notes techniques, des cas clinique. Initialement plateforme d''expression francophone de la spécialité, la revue s''oriente désormais vers l''anglais pour devenir une référence scientifique et de formation de la spécialité en France et en Europe. Avec 6 publications en anglais par an, la revue comprend également un supplément biannuel, la monographie du GEM, où sont présentées en français, des mises au point complètes dans les domaines de la chirurgie de la main, des nerfs périphériques et du membre supérieur.
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