Surgical and procedural antibiotic prophylaxis in the surgical ICU: an American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Critical Care Committee clinical consensus document

Michael Steven Farrell, John Varujan Agapian, Rachel D. Appelbaum, Dina M. Filiberto, Rondi Gelbard, Jason Hoth, Randeep Jawa, Jordan Kirsch, Matthew E. Kutcher, Eden Nohra, Abhijit Pathak, Jasmeet Paul, Bryce Robinson, Joseph Cuschieri, Deborah M. Stein*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

The use of prophylactic measures, including perioperative antibiotics, for the prevention of surgical site infections is a standard of care across surgical specialties. Unfortunately, the routine guidelines used for routine procedures do not always account for many of the factors encountered with urgent/emergent operations and critically ill or high-risk patients. This clinical consensus document created by the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Critical Care Committee is one of a three-part series and reviews surgical and procedural antibiotic prophylaxis in the surgical intensive care unit. The purpose of this clinical consensus document is to provide practical recommendations, based on expert opinion, to assist intensive care providers with decision-making for surgical prophylaxis. We specifically evaluate the current state of periprocedural antibiotic management of external ventricular drains, orthopedic operations (closed and open fractures, silver dressings, local, antimicrobial adjuncts, spine surgery, subfascial drains), abdominal operations (bowel injury and open abdomen), and bedside procedures (thoracostomy tube, gastrostomy tube, tracheostomy).

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere001305
JournalTrauma Surgery and Acute Care Open
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 3 Jun 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • antibiotic prophylaxis
  • infections

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