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Preoperative bathing of the surgical site with chlorhexidine for infection prevention: Systematic review with meta-analysis

Abstract:

Highlights:

    •The effectiveness of preoperative bathing with 4% chlorhexidine to reduce the SSI rates in clean surgeries has not been confirmed yet.

    •There is no standardization of preoperative bathing with chlorhexidine.

    •The incorporation of any process in the health field must be preceded by careful assessment of effectiveness and economic impact.

    •Controlled clinical trials are needed to assess the impact of preoperative bathing with chlorhexidine on infection rates.

Background:

Preoperative bathing with 4% chlorhexidine is recommended as a measure to prevent surgical site infection (SSI) despite uncertainty regarding the effectiveness of the intervention. This review aimed to assess the effect of bathing with 4% chlorhexidine on the prevention of SSIs in clean surgeries compared with bathing with placebo solution or soap.

Methods:

Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines for systematic reviews and the Cochrane manual were followed. Sources were MEDLINE and Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature databases and manual search of references from evaluated studies. We included randomized studies evaluating clean surgical wounds and reporting SSIs after preoperative bathing with 4% chlorhexidine.

Results:

A total of 243 primary studies were identified and 8 were considered methodologically appropriate based on the Jadad Scale. Data were gathered from 10,655 patients. The global SSI rate was 7.2%. The SSI rate for chlorhexidine bathing, placebo, and soap without antiseptic groups was 7.1%, 9.1%, and 5.1%, respectively. A significant reduction in the infection rates was not found in the comparison between patients subjected to preoperative bathing with 4% chlorhexidine versus placebo solution (relative risk, 0.91; 95% confidence interval, 0.76-1.09). The same absence of benefit was observed comparing chlorhexidine bathing with soap (relative risk, 1.06; 95% confidence interval, 0.68-1.66).

Conclusions:

Controlled clinical trials are needed to assess the effect of preoperative chlorhexidine bathing on infection rates following clean surgery before the incorporation of this intervention in health care services.

Reference:

http://www.ajicjournal.org/article/S0196-6553(16)31094-X/fulltext?elsca1=etoc&elsca2=email&elsca3=0196-6553_20170401_45_4_&elsca4=Nursing%7CInfectious%20Diseases