311. Factors Associated with Surgical Site Infection in Joint Replacement and Spine Surgery under a Staphylococcus Aureus Screening, Targeted Decolonization, and Restricted Vancomycin Protocol
Jonathan K Pinsky, Mary Anderson, Zachary Pentony, Ryan Sullivan, Karen Murphy, Vishal Didwania, Jason Pinsky

TL;DR
This study shows that a protocol involving screening for Staphylococcus aureus, decolonization, and restricted vancomycin use reduces surgical site infections in joint and spine surgeries, particularly for MRSA and obesity-related risks.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that targeted decolonization effectively reduces MSSA-related surgical site infections and highlights MRSA carriage and obesity as key risk factors.
Findings
MRSA carriage was strongly associated with surgical site infections (SSI) (OR 4.28).
Obesity (BMI 30.0-35.0 and >35.0) was significantly linked to higher SSI rates.
MSSA carriage was not significantly associated with SSI (OR 0.61).
Abstract
Screening and decolonization for Staphylococcus aureus (SA) reduces surgical site infections (SSI) in orthopedic surgery. A retrospective cohort study was performed to assess the risk associated with SA carriage under a targeted decolonization, and restricted vancomycin protocol in arthroplasty and spine surgery.Table 1Endeavor Edward Hospital Adult MSSA/MRSA Screening, Decolonization, and Preoperative Antibiotic ProtocolTable 2Risk factors and the associated: 1) number of procedures, 2) number of MSSA SSI, MRSA SSI, other SSI, 3) SSI rate, and 4) odds ratio for SSI Endeavor Edward Hospital Adult MSSA/MRSA Screening, Decolonization, and Preoperative Antibiotic Protocol Risk factors and the associated: 1) number of procedures, 2) number of MSSA SSI, MRSA SSI, other SSI, 3) SSI rate, and 4) odds ratio for SSI Under facility policy (table 1) patients undergoing arthroplasty or spine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurgical site infection prevention · Antimicrobial Resistance in Staphylococcus · Orthopedic Infections and Treatments
