Abstract

BackgroundPost-operative antibiotics are often utilized for skin and soft tissue infection (SSTI) requiring surgical incision and drainage (I&D). We propose that antibiotics are unnecessary following I&D. MethodsPatients aged 3months to 6years with SSTI of the buttocks, groin, thigh, and/or labia requiring I&D were prospectively enrolled. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients requiring re-drainage and/or antibiotics for SSTI recurrence, within 30days. Follow-up consisted of a 30-day phone call, with optional 2-week office visit, combined with chart review for patients lost to follow-up. A one-sample binomial proportion with 95% confidence interval (CI) was used to examine non-inferiority for rate of treatment success, using previously published success rates for patients receiving antibiotics post-operatively (95.9%, with a 7% margin of equivalence). ResultsA total of 92 patients were enrolled. All patients received pre-operative antibiotics. There was one treatment failure (success rate 0.989, CI 0.941–0.999). The recurrence rate was noninferior to previously-published data for patients receiving postoperative antibiotics (p<0.001). Subgroup analysis of patients who completed 30-day follow-up yielded a success rate of 0.973, CI 0.858–0.999 and evidence of non-inferiority (p=0.04). ConclusionsPost-operative management excluding antibiotics should be considered for patients who undergo I&D for SSTI. Level of evidenceLevel II (prospective cohort study with <80% follow-up)

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