Late surgical-site infection in immediate implant-based breast reconstruction Journal Article


Authors: Sinha, I.; Pusic, A. L.; Wilkins, E. G.; Hamill, J. B.; Chen, X.; Kim, H. M.; Guldbrandsen, G.; Chun, Y. S.
Article Title: Late surgical-site infection in immediate implant-based breast reconstruction
Abstract: Background: Surgical-site infection causes devastating reconstructive failure in implant-based breast reconstructions. Large national database studies offer insights into complication rates, but only capture outcomes within 30 days postoperatively. This study evaluates both early and late surgical-site infection in immediate implant-based reconstruction and identifies predictors. Methods: As part of the Mastectomy Reconstruction Outcomes Consortium Study, 1662 implant-based breast reconstructions in 1024 patients were evaluated for early versus late surgical-site infection. Early surgical-site infection was defined as infection occurring within 30 days postoperatively; late surgical-site infection was defined as infection occurring 31 days to 1 year postoperatively. Minor infection required oral antibiotics only, and major infection required hospitalization and/or surgical treatment. Direct-to-implant patients had 1-year follow-up, and tissue expander patients had 1-year post-exchange follow-up. Results: Among 1491 tissue expander and 171 direct-to-implant reconstructions, overall surgical-site infection rate for tissue expander was 5.7 percent (85 of 1491) after first-stage, 2.5 percent (31 of 1266) after second-stage, and 9.9 percent (17 of 171) for direct-to-implant reconstruction. Over 47 to 71 percent of surgical-site infection complications were late surgical-site infection. Multivariate analysis identified radiotherapy and increasing body mass index as significant predictors of late surgical-site infection. No significant difference between the direct-to-implant and tissue expander groups in the occurrence of early, late, or overall surgical-site infection was found. Conclusions: The majority of surgical-site infection complications in immediate implant-based breast reconstructions occur more than 30 days after both first-stage and second-stage procedures. Radiotherapy and obesity are significantly associated with late-onset surgical-site infection. Current studies limited to early complications do not present a complete assessment of infection associated with implant-based breast reconstructions or their long-term clinical outcomes. Copyright © 2016 American Society of Plastic Surgeons.
Journal Title: Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
Volume: 139
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0032-1052
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 2017-01-01
Start Page: 20
End Page: 28
Language: English
DOI: 10.1097/prs.0000000000002839
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 28027221
PMCID: PMC5675129
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 February 2017 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Andrea Pusic
    300 Pusic