Clinical Trial
Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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The efficacy of topical antibiotic prophylaxis for contaminated head and neck surgery.

Laryngoscope 1994 June
This study was undertaken to determine the feasibility of using perioperative topical antibiotics in contaminated head and neck surgery and to standardize the culture methodology (both qualitative and quantitative) which could serve as bacteriologic endpoints for evaluation. Following preliminary studies to establish oral cavity indicator organisms and the impact of a single antibiotic mouthwash dose on oral microflora, 10 consecutive patients undergoing contaminated head and neck surgery were recruited into a clinical trial where clindamycin mouthwash and intraoperative irrigation containing clindamycin were used instead of traditional parenteral antibiotics. The bacteriologic efficacy of topical clindamycin was assessed by comparing the presence of four indicator microorganisms (two aerobic and two anaerobic) cultured from two oral cavity culture sites before and after antibiotic prophylaxis. The patients included in the study underwent total laryngectomy plus neck dissection(s) for laryngeal or hypopharyngeal carcinoma from 1991 to 1992 at a large university hospital specializing in head and neck cancer surgery. The main outcome measures used were the development of a postoperative wound infection and quantitative and qualitative bacteriology of the intraoperative neck wound and postoperative oral cavity. Two aerobic and two anaerobic organisms proved useful as a practical indicator for bacteriologic efficacy. Preoperative mouthwash resulted in a 99% reduction of both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria in intraoperatively cultured neck sites. Irrigation during surgery with the clindamycin solution further reduced the bacterial neck counts by an additional 90%. There was a consistent overgrowth of Hemophilus species on postoperative oral cavity cultures. No patient developed a postoperative wound infection. A topical prophylactic antibiotic alone was efficacious and safe for patients undergoing major contaminated head and neck surgery. Culture methods for assessment of bacteriologic efficacy were reproducible and cost-effective. This pilot study furnishes the ethical and scientific basis for large-scale prospective trials comparing topical versus parenteral antimicrobial agents.

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