Schnurr Christoph
St. Vinzenz-Krankenhaus Düsseldorf, Schloßstraße 85, 40477, Düsseldorf, Deutschland.
Orthopadie (Heidelb). 2025 Apr;54(4):253-260. doi: 10.1007/s00132-025-04611-0. Epub 2025 Feb 19.
In terms of perioperative infections, arthroplasty for obese patients represents a high-risk procedure. Correct antibiotic prophylaxis is a central pillar of infection prophylaxis. Studies showed increased infection rates if an antibiotic other than cefazolin was administered for prophylaxis. In patients with anamnestic penicillin allergy, an existing allergy is extremely rare, and the presence of cross-allergies to cephalosporins is similarly rare. Consequently, every effort should be made to administer a first- or second generation cephalosporin such as cefazolin.
Whether the dosage of antibiotic prophylaxis should be adjusted to the body weight remains unclear due to the limited data available: case series showed increased infection rates when cefazolin was underdosed and recommended increasing the dose to 3 g if the body weight exceeds 120 kg. However, no studies with a higher level of evidence exist. Published studies on the effective antibiotic levels in the tissue remain contradictory with regard to possible weight-dependent dose adjustments. Similarly, there is insufficient data on whether local intraoperative antibiotic prophylaxis may be useful in obese patients. By contrast, there is no evidence for a positive benefit of double prophylaxis with two different antibiotics or prolonged postoperative antibiotic prophylaxis in obesity.
In summary, the data on antibiotic prophylaxis is generally insufficient, especially when focussing on possible dose adjustments in obesity. The well-timed administration of a cephalosporin such as cefazolin represents the golden standard in orthopedics and trauma surgery. A possible dose adjustment to 3 g for a body weight over 120 kg appears reasonable considering the low costs and the broad therapeutic window and is therefore recommended in the current AWMF S3 guideline.
就围手术期感染而言,肥胖患者的关节置换术是一项高风险手术。正确的抗生素预防是预防感染的核心支柱。研究表明,如果使用头孢唑林以外的抗生素进行预防,感染率会增加。在有青霉素过敏史的患者中,实际存在过敏的情况极为罕见,对头孢菌素交叉过敏的情况同样罕见。因此,应尽一切努力使用第一代或第二代头孢菌素,如头孢唑林。
由于可用数据有限,抗生素预防剂量是否应根据体重进行调整尚不清楚:病例系列研究表明,头孢唑林剂量不足时感染率会增加,并建议如果体重超过120千克,将剂量增加至3克。然而,尚无证据水平更高的研究。关于组织中有效抗生素水平的已发表研究在可能的体重依赖性剂量调整方面仍存在矛盾。同样,关于局部术中抗生素预防在肥胖患者中是否有用的数据也不足。相比之下,没有证据表明在肥胖患者中使用两种不同抗生素进行双重预防或延长术后抗生素预防有积极益处。
总之,关于抗生素预防的数据总体上不足,尤其是在关注肥胖患者可能的剂量调整时。及时使用头孢菌素如头孢唑林是骨科和创伤外科的黄金标准。考虑到成本低和治疗窗宽,对于体重超过120千克的患者,将剂量调整至3克似乎是合理的,因此在当前的德国医学科学院S3指南中被推荐。