Systematic review of groin wound surgical site infection incidence after arterial intervention

Int Wound J. 2023 Apr;20(4):1276-1291. doi: 10.1111/iwj.13959. Epub 2022 Oct 2.

Abstract

The objectives were to determine the surgical site infection incidence (including superficial/deep) fter arterial intervention through non-infected groin incisions and identify variables associated with incidence. MEDLINE, EMBASE and CENTRAL databases were searched for randomised controlled trials and observational studies of adults undergoing arterial intervention through a groin incision and reported surgical site infection. Infection incidence was examined in subgroups, variables were subjected to meta-regression. One hundred seventeen studies reporting 65 138 groin incisions in 42 347 patients were included. Overall surgical site infection incidence per incision was 8.1% (1730/21 431): 6.3% (804/12 786) were superficial and 1.9% (241/12 863) were deep. Superficial infection incidence was higher in randomised controlled trials (15.8% [278/1762]) compared with observational studies (4.8% [526/11 024]); deep infection incidence was similar (1.7% (30/1762) and 1.9% (211/11 101) respectively). Aneurysmal pathology (β = -10.229, P < .001) and retrospective observational design (β = -1.118, P = .002) were associated with lower infection incidence. Surgical site infection being a primary outcome was associated with a higher incidence of surgical site infections (β = 3.429, P = .017). The three-fold higher incidence of superficial surgical site infection reported in randomised controlled trials may be because of a more robust clinical review of patients. These results should be considered when benchmarking practice and could inform future trial design.

Keywords: groin incisions; surgical site infection; vascular.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Systematic Review

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Groin / surgery
  • Humans
  • Incidence
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Surgical Wound Infection* / epidemiology
  • Surgical Wound Infection* / etiology
  • Surgical Wound* / complications