1. Incidence and predictive risk factors of postoperative sepsis in orthopedic trauma patients.
- Author
-
Lakomkin N, Sathiyakumar V, Wick B, Shen MS, Jahangir AA, Mir H, Obremskey WT, Dodd AC, and Sethi MK
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Male, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sepsis diagnosis, Surgical Wound Infection diagnosis, United States epidemiology, Orthopedic Procedures adverse effects, Risk Assessment, Sepsis epidemiology, Surgical Wound Infection epidemiology, Wounds and Injuries surgery
- Abstract
Background: Postoperative sepsis is associated with high mortality and the national costs of septicemia exceed those of any other diagnosis. While numerous studies in the basic orthopedic science literature suggest that traumatic injuries facilitate the development of sepsis, it is currently unclear whether orthopedic trauma patients are at increased risk. The purpose of this study was thus to assess the incidence of sepsis and determine the risk factors that significantly predicted septicemia following orthopedic trauma surgery., Materials and Methods: 56,336 orthopedic trauma patients treated between 2006 and 2013 were identified in the ACS-NSQIP database. Documentation of postoperative sepsis/septic shock, demographics, surgical variables, and preoperative comorbidities was collected. Chi-squared analyses were used to assess differences in the rates of sepsis between trauma and nontrauma groups. Binary multivariable regressions identified risk factors that significantly predicted the development of postoperative septicemia in orthopedic trauma patients., Results: There was a significant difference in the overall rates of both sepsis and septic shock between orthopedic trauma (1.6%) and nontrauma (0.5%) patients (p < 0.001). For orthopedic trauma patients, ventilator use (OR = 15.1, p = 0.002), history of pain at rest (OR = 2.8, p = 0.036), and prior sepsis (OR = 2.6, p < 0.001) were significantly associated with septicemia. Statistically predictive, modifiable comorbidities included hypertension (OR = 2.1, p = 0.003) and the use of corticosteroids (OR = 2.1, p = 0.016)., Conclusions: There is a significantly greater incidence of postoperative sepsis in the trauma cohort. Clinicians should be aware of these predictive characteristics, may seek to counsel at-risk patients, and should consider addressing modifiable risk factors such as hypertension and corticosteroid use preoperatively. Level of evidence Level III.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF