Postoperative Infections In Dermatologic Surgery: The Role Of Wound Cultures

DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY(2020)

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Abstract
BACKGROUND Dermatologic surgery is associated with low postoperative infection rates, averaging from approximately 1% to 4.25%. Often, postoperative infections are treated empirically based on clinical diagnosis of infection, given it can take 48 to 72 hours for a wound culture to identify a pathogen. OBJECTIVE We aimed to evaluate the efficacy of empiric antibiotics in dermatologic surgery postoperative infections and if wound cultures change postoperative antibiotic therapy. METHODS A 7-center, retrospective analysis of postoperative infections, with culture data, in dermatologic surgery patients was performed. RESULTS Of 91 cases of clinically diagnosed postoperative infection, 82.4% (n= 75) were successfully treated with empiric oral antibiotics (95% confidence interval [0.73-0.89],p< .0001). In 16 (17.6%) cases, initial empiric antibiotics were unsuccessful, and wound culture results altered antibiotic therapy in 9 cases (9.9%) with 6 (6.6%) of these cases requiring additional coverage for methicillin-resistantStaphylococcus aureus(MRSA). CONCLUSION Empiric antibiotic treatment is usually appropriate for patients with postoperative surgical-site infections with wound cultures altering antibiotic management in a minority of cases. When empiric antibiotics fail, lack of MRSA coverage is usually the cause; therefore, providers should be aware of local MRSA prevalence and susceptibilities.
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Key words
postoperative infections,wound cultures,dermatologic surgery
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