P-90. Microbiology of Spinal Fusion Infections: An Analysis of the National Healthcare Safety Network Database
Molly Lindstrom, Benjamin Langworthy, Jonathan Sembrano, James Glover, Don Bambino Geno Tai

TL;DR
This study analyzed spinal fusion infection data to identify risk factors for Gram-negative infections and found they are more common in certain patient and surgical conditions.
Contribution
The study identifies specific risk factors for Gram-negative spinal fusion infections using a national database.
Findings
Gram-negative infections were more common in older patients, females, and those with higher BMI.
Lumbar surgeries had a higher rate of Gram-negative infections compared to cervical surgeries.
Trauma-related surgeries were twice as likely to result in Gram-negative infections.
Abstract
Understanding the current microbial causes of surgical site infections (SSIs) following spinal fusion surgeries is essential for guiding prevention strategies and empiric antibiotic choices. This study aimed to characterize the microbiology of these infections and identify risk factors associated with Gram-negative (GN) infections.Table 1:Summary of Patient and Case Demographics Summary of Patient and Case Demographics All cases of spinal fusion SSIs that were reported to the NHSN database between 2021 and 2022 were analyzed. Any cases involving SSI that had a known infection at the time of diagnosis of SSI were excluded.Table 2:Risk Factors for Gram-Negative Organism Infection in Spinal Fusion SSI Risk Factors for Gram-Negative Organism Infection in Spinal Fusion SSI We analyzed both patient and surgical factors compared to the number of gram-negative organisms identified in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurgical site infection prevention · Orthopedic Infections and Treatments · Infectious Diseases and Tuberculosis
