P-1129. Microbiologically-defined Tissue Expander Infections: Evaluating risk factors for recurrence and optimal management strategies
Rita Igwilo-Alaneme, Nischal Ranganath, Aparna Vijayasekaran, Allison LeMahieu, nishant Kumar, Vasupriya Ravi, Muhammad Sabry Mazroua, Ryan W W Stevens, Aditya Shah

TL;DR
This study examines risk factors and treatment outcomes for tissue expander infections after breast reconstruction, finding that two-staged exchange or explantation reduces recurrence.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into optimal management strategies for microbiologically-defined tissue expander infections.
Findings
Two-staged exchange or explantation significantly lowers recurrence risk compared to one-staged exchange.
Antibiotics alone or combined with surgery show no significant difference in outcomes.
Severity and radiation therapy are linked to higher recurrence rates.
Abstract
In 2019, the US performed 290,000 breast reconstructions with an estimated infection rate of 3-35%. Tissue expander infections detract from desired aesthetic effects, delay adjuvant treatments, increase morbidity and mortality, and have high recurrence rates (20-40%). Little is known about risk factors for recurrent tissue expander infections, particularly the impacts of different treatment modalities. We conducted a single-center retrospective cohort study of adult women post-mastectomy who developed microbiologically-proven tissue expander infection between the period of 2017 – 2024. Outcomes including 12-month infection recurrence and risk factors for recurrence were compared between surgical versus nonoperative groups, as well as between three surgical strategies (i.e., one-stage, two-stage, explantation). Unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression models were used to assess the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBreast Implant and Reconstruction · Organ and Tissue Transplantation Research · Surgical site infection prevention
