• Anesthesia and analgesia · Aug 2014

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study

    Supplemental postoperative oxygen does not reduce surgical site infection and major healing-related complications from bariatric surgery in morbidly obese patients: a randomized, blinded trial.

    12-16h of post-op supplemental O2 (80%) does not reduce wound infection or complication in the morbidly obese undergoing gastric bypass.

    pearl
    • Anupama Wadhwa, Barbara Kabon, Edith Fleischmann, Andrea Kurz, and Daniel I Sessler.
    • From the *Department of Anesthesiology, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky; †Department of Anesthesiology and General Intensive Care, Vienna General Hospital, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria; and ‡Department of Outcomes Research, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio.
    • Anesth. Analg.. 2014 Aug 1;119(2):357-65.

    BackgroundMorbidly obese patients are at high risk for perioperative complications, including surgical site infections. Baseline arterial oxygenation is low in the morbidly obese, leading to low tissue oxygenation, which in turn is a primary determinant of infection risk. We therefore tested the hypothesis that extending intraoperative supplemental oxygen 12 to 16 hours into the postoperative period reduces the risk of surgical site infection and healing-related complications.MethodsMorbidly obese patients having open or laparoscopic bariatric surgery were given 80% inspired oxygen intraoperatively. Postoperatively, patients were randomly assigned to either 2 L/min of oxygen via nasal cannula or approximately 80% supplemental inspired oxygen after tracheal extubation until the first postoperative morning. The risks of surgical site infection and of major healing-related complications were evaluated 60 days after surgery.ResultsIn a preplanned interim analysis based on the initial 400 patients, the overall observed incidence of the collapsed composite of major complications was 13.3%; the observed incidence of components of the composite outcome ranged from 0% (peritonitis) to 8.5% (surgical wound infection). The estimated relative risk of any ≥1 major complications occurring within the first 60 days after surgery, adjusting for study site, was 0.94 (95% confidence interval, 0.52-1.68) (P = 0.80, Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel). The Executive Committee thus stopped the trial for futility.ConclusionsSupplemental postoperative oxygen does not reduce the risk of surgical site infection rate and healing-related postoperative complications in patients having gastric bypass surgery.

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    pearl
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    12-16h of post-op supplemental O2 (80%) does not reduce wound infection or complication in the morbidly obese undergoing gastric bypass.

    Daniel Jolley  Daniel Jolley
     
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