Nagy Zoltán, Szabó Dóra, Agócs Gergely, Szilágyi Konrád, Rojcsik Zsanett, Budai József, Papp Zoltán, Padányi Csaba, Erőss Loránd, Sipos László, Banczerowski Péter
Clinic of Neurosurgery and Neurointervention, Semmelweis University, 1085 Budapest, Hungary.
Department of Neurosurgery, Semmelweis University, 1085 Budapest, Hungary.
Antibiotics (Basel). 2025 Aug 15;14(8):830. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics14080830.
Surgical site infections (SSIs) are a significant postoperative complication in instrumented lumbar spine surgery, and the selection and duration of appropriate prophylactic antibiotics are key to their prevention. The aim of our study was to evaluate the effectiveness of various prophylactic antibiotics, primarily cefazolin and clindamycin, as well as the role of the duration of antibiotic prophylaxis in the development of SSI in instrumented lumbar spine surgeries through retrospective analysis. We performed a retrospective analysis of data from 915 patients who underwent instrumented lumbar spine surgery between 2016 and 2024 in a university center database. We examined the incidence of SSI according to the type of antibiotic used (cefazolin 1 g or 2 g, or clindamycin 0.6 g) and the duration of prophylaxis (single dose versus 72 h administration). We used the Fisher test and Welch test as a statistical analysis to examine the differences between SSI rates. The incidence of SSI was 11.7%. We measured a significantly lower infection rate with cefazolin compared to clindamycin (OR = 0.45; 95% CI: 0.23-0.94; = 0.0206), regardless of the duration of antibiotic administration. The 72 h cefazolin prophylaxis showed a slight but statistically insignificant advantage over single dose prophylaxis. The risk of SSI was significantly higher in multi-segment surgeries ( = 0.0005). Cefazolin is a more effective prophylactic antibiotic than clindamycin during instrumented lumbar spine surgery. The duration of antibiotic administration has less influence on the risk of SSI development; therefore, short-term, adequate-dose cefazolin prophylaxis is recommended, which also minimizes the risk of antimicrobial resistance and side effects.
手术部位感染(SSIs)是器械辅助腰椎手术中一种严重的术后并发症,选择合适的预防性抗生素及其使用时长是预防该并发症的关键。本研究旨在通过回顾性分析,评估各种预防性抗生素(主要是头孢唑林和克林霉素)的有效性,以及抗生素预防时长在器械辅助腰椎手术中手术部位感染发生发展过程中的作用。我们对某大学中心数据库中2016年至2024年间接受器械辅助腰椎手术的915例患者的数据进行了回顾性分析。我们根据所用抗生素类型(1g或2g头孢唑林,或0.6g克林霉素)和预防时长(单剂量与72小时给药)来检查手术部位感染的发生率。我们使用Fisher检验和Welch检验作为统计分析方法来检查手术部位感染率之间的差异。手术部位感染的发生率为11.7%。无论抗生素给药时长如何,与克林霉素相比,头孢唑林的感染率显著更低(OR = 0.45;95% CI:0.23 - 0.94;P = 0.0206)。72小时的头孢唑林预防与单剂量预防相比显示出轻微但无统计学意义的优势。多节段手术中手术部位感染的风险显著更高(P = 0.0005)。在器械辅助腰椎手术期间,头孢唑林是比克林霉素更有效的预防性抗生素。抗生素给药时长对手术部位感染发生风险的影响较小;因此,建议使用短期、足量的头孢唑林进行预防,这也能将抗菌药物耐药性和副作用的风险降至最低。