Impact of Antibiotic Selection for Prophylaxis of Left Ventricular
Assist Device Surgical Infections
Abstract
Surgical site infections (SSI) after left ventricular assist device
(LVAD) implantation are associated with high mortality, while surgical
prophylaxis is variable. This retrospective study included adult
patients who underwent LVAD implantation at a single center. We compared
outcomes in patients who received narrow antimicrobial prophylaxis
(cefazolin, vancomycin or both) to those who received broad
antimicrobial prophylaxis (any antimicrobial combination targeting
gram-positive and gram-negative organisms not included in the narrow
group) at 30 days and 1 year post-implantation. Cox-proportional hazards
models and log-rank tests were used for survival analysis. Among the 39
and 65 patients comprising narrow and broad groups respectively, there
was no difference in rate of SSI at 30 days (6.2% vs 12.8%, p = 0.290)
and 1 year (16.9% vs 25.6%, p = 0.435). Comparing narrow to broad
prophylaxis, the risk of mortality [HR (95% CI): 0.44 (0.15. 1.35),
logrank P = 0.14], and composite of mortality and infection was
reduced [HR (95% CI): 0.92 (0.45, 1.88), logrank P = 0.83], but did
not reach statistical significance. Most culture positive infections
were due to gram-positive bacteria (70%) and the most common organisms
were the Staphylococcus spp (47%). There were no significant
differences in the rate of SSI at 1-year (p=1.00) and mortality (p=0.33)
by device type. The rates of infection and all-cause mortality were not
different between patients who received narrow or broad prophylaxis.
This highlights an opportunity for institutions to narrow their surgical
infection prophylaxis protocols to primarily cover gram-positive
organisms.