Abstract

Wound infections following kidney transplantation are common, with a reported incidence of 5%-19%. In the first few days after surgery, these patients receive extremely high doses of immunosuppression and high volumes of intravenous fluids, and they represent a specific subgroup of surgical patients that may benefit from using prophylactic subcutaneous drains. We analyzed a nonrandomized series of 112 consecutive kidney transplants between January 2017 and December 2019: those who received a subcutaneous drain in addition to the standard retroperitoneal drain (SQ drain group) vs those with a retroperitoneal drain alone (standard group). The SQ drain group had a significantly higher median BMI (31.2 vs 25.8, P < .0001) and a trend towards more patients having diabetes and receiving thymoglobulin on induction. Nonetheless, 1/36 (3%) of patients in the SQ drain group had a documented wound infection requiring packing compared to the standard group 13/73 (17%) (P = .032). When multivariate regression analysis accounted for the potential confounders BMI, thymoglobulin use, and diabetes, the protective effect of the SQ drain was more significant (P = .001). An SQ drain may be a simple and inexpensive method to reduce the rate of wound complications in kidney transplant recipients; prospective studies are warranted.

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