Nigeria study urges urgent changes to global guidelines designed to stop surgical infection

US-HEALTH-VIRUS-LUNG-TRANSPLANT

This image released by Northwestern Medicine, shows nurses at the Covid-19 Intensive Care Unit of Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. - Surgeons have performed a double-lung transplant on a COVID-19 patient in Chicago, the hospital that carried out the procedure said Thursday, in what is thought to be a first in the US. The patient is a young Hispanic woman in her twenties, and had spent six weeks on a life support machine in the intensive care unit of Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. By early June, her lungs had become so badly damaged to the point that it was decided that a transplant was her only option. "A lung transplant was her only chance for survival," said Ankit Bharat, chief of thoracic surgery and surgical director of the Northwestern Medicine Lung Transplant Program. (Photo by Laura Brown / Northwestern Medicine / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / Northwestern Medicine / Laura Brown " - NO MARKETING - NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS


A new study carried out in Nigeria, Benin, Ghana, India, Mexico, Rwanda and South Africa has called for urgent changes to global guidelines designed to stop surgical infection

The study, published today in The Lancet, revealed wound infections are the most common problems after surgery, particularly in developing countries.

Both World Health Organisation (WHO) and the United Kingdom’s (UK’s) National Institute of Health Research guidelines recommend that surgeons use alcoholic chlorhexidine skin preparation and triclosan coated sutures to prevent Surgical Site Infection (SSI).

However, the FALCON study, which is the world’s largest wound infection trial, could not demonstrate superiority of these interventions over lower cost alternatives.

The UK’s National Institute funded the FALCON trial for Health Research (NIHR). The researchers participating in this study are calling for guidelines recommending these measures, either specifically to Low- and Middle-income Countries (LMIC) or at a general global level, to be revised.

Co-author from the University of Birmingham, Mr. Aneel Bhangu, commented: “Surgical site infection is the world’s most common postoperative complication – a major burden for both patients and health systems. We have delivered the biggest trial of its kind, where we could not demonstrate the superiority of these interventions over cheaper alternatives.

“Our findings are hugely important for a wide range of care providers in LMICs, as following existing WHO and NICE guidelines, which have significant cost implications for organisations which have limited resources.”

The NIHR Global Research Health Unit on Global Surgery trial covered 5,788 patients from 54 hospitals in seven countries – a broad and representative range including adults and children undergoing contaminated/dirty surgery, emergency surgery and caesarian section.

Co-author from the University of Lagos and Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Prof. Adesoji Ademuyiwa, who coordinated the study in 12 hospitals across different geopolitical zones in Nigeria, commented: “The overall SSI rate was very high at 22 per cent – a preventable complication that is causing unnecessary suffering and burden to patients and systems.

“It is clear that small randomised trials should now be avoided and should be replaced with larger trials that can provide more robust evidence on the incidence of SSI, ultimately leading to more effective measures to help tackle this global healthcare challenge. This high quality evidence will impact heavily on practice in LMICs including Nigeria as cheaper and available options can be confidently used for patients with calm assurance that outcome will not be adversely affected.”

Co-investigator from University of Ilorin, Nigeria, Prof. Lukman Abdur-Rahman, commented: “We have often thought that the use of skin preparation agents and anti-microbial impregnated sutures recommended by WHO and NICE gave the High-Income Countries advantage in the reduction of Surgical site infections as compared with the Low and Middle Incomes Countries (LMICs) where these expensive agents and sutures are not readily available. This multi-centred pragmatic randomized study in LMICs showed no significant reduction in SSI rates despite the choice and use of the materials or agents. There is a need for global review of the guidelines of measures to reduce SSI.”

Co-investigator from the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, Dr. Samson Olori, said: “The FALCON study was a huge attempt at finding solution to the persistent menace of the SSI in LMICS. We latched into it hoping that the perennial question on how best to address SSI in our environment could be answered, alas that was not to be. But the study was a huge success in itself, because it has further proved that large-scale randomised studies will provide trusted data to address research question. For now, the quest continues, perhaps a follow up study designed along the peculiarities of the LMICS may help find answers to SSI.”

Principal Investigator at Nnamdi Azikwe University Teaching Hospital (NAUTH), Dr. Hyginus Ekuwnife, said: “This high quality, multinational large scale trial in Iow and middle income countries (LMICs) has finally rested the argument on the superiority of either alcohol chlorhexidine or povidone iodine and triclosan coated antibiotic sutures in surgical site infection control.”

He continued: “For long, decisions concerning the high Surgical Site Infection (SSI) in LMICs has been based on data extrapolated from high income nations with risks of poor validity and efficiency. The multinational surgical site infection trial is good news for the LMICs where increasing cost of surgery tends to catastrophic expenditures and further impoverishment. Hopefully, this beautiful research experience will open further research doors to contain the still high SSI rate on LMICs. Considerations need to be given to processes more than products.”

Join Our Channels