PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Al Farii, Humaid AU - Slawaska-Eng, David AU - Pankovitch, Sarah AU - Navarro-Ramirez, Rodrigo AU - Weber, Michael TI - Gram-Negative Surgical Site Infections After 989 Spinal Fusion Procedures: Associated Factors and the Role of Gram-Negative Prophylactic Antibiotic Coverage AID - 10.14444/8044 DP - 2021 Mar 31 TA - International Journal of Spine Surgery PG - 8044 4099 - https://www.ijssurgery.com/content/early/2021/03/30/8044.short 4100 - https://www.ijssurgery.com/content/early/2021/03/30/8044.full AB - Background To identify, analyze, and report the patient- and procedure-related factors associated with surgical site infection (SSI) after spinal fusion (SF) surgery.Methods We included any SSI-SF from January 2013 to September 2015. A total of 989 spine surgeries that required instrumentation were performed.Results Twenty-four out of 989 (2.43%) patients presented with SSI. More than half of the SSI cases (54%) got infected with either exclusively gram-negative bacteria or a combination of gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria; 9.1% of the surgeries involved the sacral spine (90 out of 989 patients). SSI in long constructs (more than 3 levels) was performed in 66.7% compared with 33.3% with short constructs; 87.5 % of the reported SSI (21 patients) were done through a posterior approach. Of patients who had SSI, 87.5% received prophylactic antibiotics, 92% were operated on during the daytime shift, 50% required blood transfusion, and 79% required surgical debridement. Four patients out of 24 patients died (17%) due to unrelated SSI complications.Conclusions The overall incidence of gram-negative infections after long SFs remains low in our study population. Despite this low overall incidence, our results demonstrate a relative higher incidence of gram-negative SSIs in surgeries involving more than 3 spinal levels and for all those involving the sacral spine. We propose that there may be a potential benefit of gram-negative prophylactic antibiotic coverage in patients falling in either 1 of these categories. Further multivariate analysis and/or randomized studies may be necessary to confirm our results.Level of Evidence 3.