Relationship between bile colonization, high-risk factors and postoperative sepsis in patients undergoing biliary tract operations while receiving a prophylactic antibiotic

Author:

,Wells G R1,Taylor E W2,Lindsay G1,Morton L2

Affiliation:

1. Southern General Hospital, Glasgow, UK

2. Vale of Leven Hospital, Alexandria, G83 0UA, UK

Abstract

Abstract A prospective audit of 644 patients undergoing biliary tract operations has been conducted to assess the incidence of bile colonization and its association with the incidence of postoperative sepsis when all patients received the same prophylactic antibiotic. The accuracy of the determination of high-risk factors has been assessed as has the correlation between bile colonization and patients assessed as ‘high risk’. Organisms were cultured from the bile of 121 (19 per cent) patients and among these the incidence of wound or intra-abdominal sepsis was 22 per cent whereas among patients with sterile bile the incidence was only 2 per cent (P<0·0001). Although the incidence of bile colonization within the high-risk group (32 per cent) was more than twice that in the low-risk group (14 per cent), more than half (54 per cent) of the patients with positive bile cultures were in the low-risk group. It is concluded that, despite prophylactic antibiotics, bile colonization remains the major factor associated with postoperative sepsis, but that this cannot be predicted accurately by preoperative assessment of high-risk factors. Furthermore, we believe that a policy of selective administration of prophylactic antibiotics solely to high-risk patients cannot be justified.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

Reference24 articles.

1. Bacteriology and antibiotic selection in biliary surgery;Mason;Arch Surg,1968

2. An endogenous source for wound infections based on quantitative bacteriology of the biliary tract;Robson;Surgery,1970

3. Biliary bacteraemia;Chetlin;Arch Surg,1971

4. Multivariate analysis of clinical and operative findings associated with biliary sepsis;Keighley;Br J Surg,1976

5. Septic complications following cholecystectomy;Regan;Ir Med J,1985

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