Abstract

Procedures for perioperative infection prophylaxis in elective colon cancer surgery consist of preoperative mechanical preparation, chemical preparation with oral antibiotic administration, perioperative intravenous antibiotic administration, and others. However, the optimal combination of these procedures and drugs and their durations of administration have not yet been established. A randomized study was conducted to determine the optimal duration of perioperative antibiotic administration with use of mechanical and chemical preparation. A total of 370 patients who were to undergo elective colon cancer surgery were randomized into 2 groups. After mechanical and chemical preparations, a single, 1-g dose of flomoxef was administered immediately before surgery to patients in group A. Flomoxef 1 g was administered twice daily for a total of 4 days from the day of surgery to postoperative day 3 to patients in group B. Comparison was performed between 179 patients in group A and 181 patients in group B with analyzable data. The incidences of incisional surgical site infections (SSIs), organ/space SSIs, and remote infections (RIs) were 15 patients (8.4%), 1 patient (0.6%), and 8 patients (4.5%), respectively, in group A, and 13 patients (7.2%), 2 patients (1.1%), and 6 patients (3.3%), respectively, in group B. There were no differences in the incidence of incisional SSIs, organ/space SSIs, or RIs between groups A and B. It was shown that a single dose of intravenous antibiotic immediately before surgery is sufficient as perioperative infection prophylaxis in elective colon cancer surgery when mechanical and chemical preparation is performed.

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