# Evaluating Risk Factors for Surgical Site Occurrences: Infection and Wound Dehiscence Post Definitive Surgery for Sacrococcygeal Pilonidal Sinus Disease

**Authors:** Ellen G Maclean, Mary M Teoh, Cian Casey, Eoghan Blount, David Walsh, Alexander Armanios, Munyaradzi G Nyandoro

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.97368 · Cureus · 2025-11-20

## TL;DR

This study identifies risk factors for infections and wound dehiscence after surgery for a common condition in young adults, offering insights to improve surgical outcomes.

## Contribution

The study provides a multi-centre evaluation of risk factors for surgical complications in sacrococcygeal pilonidal sinus disease using diverse surgical techniques.

## Key findings

- Surgical site infections and wound dehiscence occurred in nearly 29% of patients each.
- Secondary intention techniques and overweight status significantly increased infection risk.
- Modified Karydakis flap showed the most favorable risk profile for wound dehiscence.

## Abstract

Background: Sacrococcygeal pilonidal sinus disease (SPD) predominantly affects young adults and is associated with high morbidity after surgery. Surgical site infections (SSIs) and wound dehiscence (WD) are frequent and clinically significant complications. This study evaluated their rates and identified associated risk factors across multiple surgical techniques.

Methods: A retrospective multi-centre cohort study was conducted across eight hospitals in Western Australia (2010-2019). Patients aged ≥15 years undergoing elective definitive SPD surgery with flap or secondary intention techniques were included. Data were extracted from medical records and electronic databases. SSI risk was analysed with univariate and multivariate logistic regression, while WD was examined using Cox proportional hazards modelling. Outcomes included 30-day re-presentation and readmission rates, with extended follow-up for recurrence.

Results: A total of 774 patients were analysed. SSIs occurred in 28.8% and WD in 28.4%. The cohort included 79.7% male patients, with a mean age of 27.08 (SD±9.06) years and a BMI of 28.58 (SD±6.15).

Multivariate analysis demonstrated that secondary intention techniques (OR 6.0, p<0.01), other flap procedures (OR 3.1, p=0.03), overweight status (OR 1.9, p=0.01), and WD (OR 50.6, p<0.01) were independent risk factors for SSIs. In contrast, clear surgical margins and methylene blue use were protective.

Cox regression showed increased WD risk with Karydakis flap (HR 1.8, p=0.04), modified Limberg flap (HR 2.0, p=0.03), and smoking (HR 1.4, p=0.04). Within 30 days, 27% re-presented and 7.5% were readmitted, mainly for SSIs or WD, with regional variation reflecting practice differences.

Conclusion: SSIs and WD remain common and burdensome after SPD surgery. The modified Karydakis flap demonstrated the most favourable risk profile. Optimising patient factors, meticulous surgical technique, and structured training are essential to reduce complications and improve outcomes.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** methylene blue (PubChem CID 4139)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** WD (MESH:D013529), Infection (MESH:D007239), overweight (MESH:D050177), SSIs (MESH:D013530), SPD (MESH:D010864)
- **Chemicals:** methylene blue (MESH:D008751)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12634152/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12634152