Seasonal Variation of Common Surgical Site Infections: Does Season Matter?

Michael J Durkin, Kristen V Dicks, Arthur W Baker, Sarah S Lewis, Rebekah W Moehring, Luke F Chen, Daniel J Sexton, Deverick J Anderson, Michael J Durkin, Kristen V Dicks, Arthur W Baker, Sarah S Lewis, Rebekah W Moehring, Luke F Chen, Daniel J Sexton, Deverick J Anderson

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate seasonal variation in the rate of surgical site infections (SSI) following commonly performed surgical procedures.

Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Methods: We analyzed 6 years (January 1, 2007, through December 31, 2012) of data from the 15 most commonly performed procedures in 20 hospitals in the Duke Infection Control Outreach Network. We defined summer as July through September. First, we performed 3 separate Poisson regression analyses (unadjusted, multivariable, and polynomial) to estimate prevalence rates and prevalence rate ratios of SSI following procedures performed in summer versus nonsummer months. Then, we stratified our results to obtain estimates based on procedure type and organism type. Finally, we performed a sensitivity analysis to test the robustness of our findings.

Results: We identified 4,543 SSI following 441,428 surgical procedures (overall prevalence rate, 1.03/100 procedures). The rate of SSI was significantly higher during the summer compared with the remainder of the year (1.11/100 procedures vs 1.00/100 procedures; prevalence rate ratio, 1.11 [95% CI, 1.04-1.19]; P=.002). Stratum-specific SSI calculations revealed higher SSI rates during the summer for both spinal (P=.03) and nonspinal (P=.004) procedures and revealed higher rates during the summer for SSI due to either gram-positive cocci (P=.006) or gram-negative bacilli (P=.004). Multivariable regression analysis and sensitivity analyses confirmed our findings.

Conclusions: The rate of SSI following commonly performed surgical procedures was higher during the summer compared with the remainder of the year. Summer SSI rates remained elevated after stratification by organism and spinal versus nonspinal surgery, and rates did not change after controlling for other known SSI risk factors.

Conflict of interest statement

conflicts of interest . All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Surgical site infection (SSI) prevalence rate per 100 procedures by month for all organisms and common procedures. Polynomial regression analysis resulted in a best-fit line that shows statistically significant seasonal variation with the highest SSI prevalence rate during the summer months.

Source: PubMed

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