Abstract

Postoperative surgical site infection is a serious problem. Coverage of sterile goods may be important to protect the goods from bacterial air contamination while awaiting surgery. To evaluate the effectiveness of this practice in a systematic review covering five databases using search terms related to bacterial contamination in the operating room and on surgical instruments. MEDLINE, Cochrane, CINAHL, Embase, and Web of Science databases were searched from inception to February 13th, 2023, for randomized and non-randomized controlled studies of covering interventions conducted in the operating room setting. The outcome was bacterial air contamination measured as colony-forming units, and a meta-analysis was performed in separate time periods of coverage. This systematic review and meta-analysis is reported according to the PRISMA statement, and the protocol was prospectively registered in PROSPERO (CRD42022323113). The time points ranged from 30min to 24h. The results showed that covering sterile goods significantly prevented bacterial air contamination as compared to uncovered goods. The meta-analysis was in favour of covering sterile goods for protection from bacterial air contamination, and showed an effect size Z of 4.76 (P<0.00001; confidence interval:-1.94 to-0.81). The heterogeneity analysis showed a heterogeneity of 83%. No negative effects regarding bacterial contamination were found, and so we conclude that protection with a sterile cover decreases bacterial air contamination of sterile goods while waiting for surgery to start.

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