fr
Article scientifique
Accès libre
Anglais

Intraoperative dexamethasone does not increase the risk of postoperative wound infection: a propensity score-matched post hoc analysis of the ENIGMA-II trial (EnDEX)

Contributeurs/tricesCorcoran, T; Kasza, J; Short, T.G.; O'Loughlin, E; Chan, M.T.V.; Leslie, K; Forbes, A; Paech, M; Myles, P; ENIGMA-II investigators
Collaborateurs/tricesHaller, Guy Serge Antoine; Pichon, I.
Publié dansBritish journal of anaesthesia, vol. 118, no. 2, p. 190-199
Date de publication2017-02
Résumé

Background: In a post hoc analysis of the ENIGMA-II trial, we sought to determine whether intraoperative dexamethasone was associated with adverse safety outcomes.

Methods: Inverse probability weighting with estimated propensity scores was used to determine the association of dexamethasone administration with postoperative infection, quality of recovery, and adverse safety outcomes for 5499 of the 7112 non-cardiac surgery subjects enrolled in ENIGMA-II.

Results: Dexamethasone was administered to 2178 (40%) of the 5499 subjects included in this analysis and was not associated with wound infection [189 (8.7%) vs 275 (8.3%); propensity score-adjusted relative risk (RR) 1.10; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.89-1.34; P=0.38], severe postoperative nausea and vomiting on day 1 [242 (7.3%) vs 189 (8.7%); propensity score-adjusted RR 1.06; 95% CI 0.86-1.30; P=0.59], quality of recovery score [median 14, interquartile range (IQR) 12-15, vs median 14, IQR 12-16, P=0.10), length of stay in the postanaesthesia care unit [propensity score-adjusted median (IQR) 2.0 (1.3, 2.9) vs 1.9 (1.3, 3.1), P=0.60], or the primary outcome of the main trial. Dexamethasone administration was associated with a decrease in fever on days 1-3 [182 (8.4%) vs 488 (14.7%); RR 0.61; 95% CI 0.5-0.74; P<0.001] and shorter lengths of stay in hospital [propensity score-adjusted median (IQR) 5.0 (2.9, 8.2) vs 5.3 (3.1, 9.1), P<0.001]. Neither diabetes mellitus nor surgical wound contamination status altered these outcomes.

Conclusion: Dexamethasone administration to high-risk non-cardiac surgical patients did not increase the risk of postoperative wound infection or other adverse events up to day 30, and appears to be safe in patients either with or without diabetes mellitus.

eng
Mots-clés
  • Dexamethasone
  • Nitrous oxide
  • Postoperative nausea and vomiting
  • Surgical wound infection
Citation (format ISO)
CORCORAN, T et al. Intraoperative dexamethasone does not increase the risk of postoperative wound infection: a propensity score-matched post hoc analysis of the ENIGMA-II trial (EnDEX). In: British journal of anaesthesia, 2017, vol. 118, n° 2, p. 190–199. doi: 10.1093/bja/aew446
Fichiers principaux (1)
Article (Published version)
accessLevelPublic
Identifiants
ISSN du journal0007-0912
100vues
39téléchargements

Informations techniques

Création05/01/2022 12:00:00
Première validation05/01/2022 12:00:00
Heure de mise à jour16/03/2023 02:31:22
Changement de statut16/03/2023 02:31:20
Dernière indexation17/01/2024 16:04:30
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack