Immediate air exposure vs dressings following primary closure of clean and clean-contaminated surgical wounds: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.

Wounds : a compendium of clinical research and practice(2022)

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INTRODUCTION:It is unknown whether dressings reduce the risk of SSI after clean and clean-contaminated surgery. OBJECTIVE:This meta-analysis was conducted to assess the outcomes of immediate air exposure of surgical sites after primary closure. MATERIALS AND METHODS:A systematic search of Embase, PubMed, and Web of Science from the time of database establishment through October 2021 was performed. The SSI incidence and other surgical wound-associated events were extracted and their effect sizes calculated. RESULTS:Six RCTs with a total of 1243 surgery cases (1228 non-contaminated, 15 contaminated) were included. SSI incidence of 11% and 11.1% was observed for immediate air exposure and dressings, respectively, when pooled irrespective of surgery type (RR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.68-1.33 [P = .76]). Subgroup analysis showed similar SSI incidence between air exposure and dressings following clean (P = .39) and clean-contaminated surgery (P = .64). Neither gauze dressings (P = .65), film dressings (P = .07), nor tissue glue-as-a-dressing (P = .94) use resulted in significantly lower SSI incidence than air exposure. CONCLUSIONS:This meta-analysis shows that dressings (gauze dressings, film dressings, and tissue glue-as-a-dressing) do not outperform immediate air exposure in terms of SSI occurrence following primary closure of clean and clean-contaminated surgical wounds.
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