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Immediate Titanium Mesh Cranioplasty After Debridement and Craniectomy for Postcraniotomy Surgical Site Infections and Risk Factors for Reoperation

Authors :
Tamia Potter
Roger Murayi
Peter Ahorukomeye
Jordan C. Petitt
Jakub Jarmula
Maria Krywyj
Arbaz Momin
Pablo F. Recinos
Alireza M. Mohammadi
Lilyana Angelov
Gene H. Barnett
Varun R. Kshettry
Source :
World Neurosurgery. 171:e493-e499
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

We previously published a novel strategy for management of postcraniotomy bone flap infection consisting of single stage debridement, bone flap removal, and immediate titanium mesh cranioplasty.Postcraniotomy patients with surgical site infections treated with surgical debridement, bone flap removal, and immediate titanium mesh cranioplasty were retrospectively reviewed. The primary outcome measure was reoperation due to persistent infection or wound healing complications from the titanium mesh.We included 48 patients, of which 15 (31.3%) were female. The most common primary diagnoses were glioblastoma (31.3%), meningioma (18.8%), and vascular/trauma (16.7%). Most patients had a history of same-site craniotomy prior to the surgery complicated by surgical site infection and 47.9% had prior cranial radiation. Thirty-six (75.0%) patients achieved resolution of their infection and did not require a second operation. Twelve (25.0%) patients required reoperation: 6 (12.5%) patients were found to have frank intraoperative purulence on reoperation, whereas 6 (12.5%) had reoperation for poor wound healing without any evidence of persistent infection. Cochran Armitage trend test revealed that patients with increasing number of wound healing risk factors had significantly higher risk of reoperation (P = 0.001). Prior intensity modulated radiotherapy alone was a significant risk factor for reoperation (6.5 [1.40-30.31], P = 0.002). Median follow-up time was 20.5 weeks.Immediate titanium mesh cranioplasty at the time of debridement and bone flap removal is an acceptable option in the management of post-craniotomy bone flap infection. Patients with multiple wound healing risk factors are at higher risk for reoperation.

Subjects

Subjects :
Surgery
Neurology (clinical)

Details

ISSN :
18788750
Volume :
171
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
World Neurosurgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a7d395b07c0e67b0ab646519b587f2ba