Early recognition and response to increases in surgical site infections using optimised statistical process control charts-The early 2RIS trial: A multicentre stepped wedge cluster randomised controlled trial.
Abstract
<h4>Background</h4>Traditional approaches for surgical site infection (SSI) surveillance
have deficiencies that delay detection of SSI outbreaks and other clinically important
increases in SSI rates. We investigated whether use of optimised statistical process
control (SPC) methods and feedback for SSI surveillance would decrease rates of SSI
in a network of US community hospitals.<h4>Methods</h4>We conducted a stepped wedge
cluster randomised trial of patients who underwent any of 13 types of common surgical
procedures across 29 community hospitals in the Southeastern United States. We divided
the 13 procedures into six clusters; a cluster of procedures at a single hospital
was the unit of randomisation and analysis. In total, 105 clusters were randomised
to 12 groups of 8-10 clusters. All participating clusters began the trial in a 12-month
baseline period of control or "traditional" SSI surveillance, including prospective
analysis of SSI rates and consultative support for SSI outbreaks and investigations.
Thereafter, a group of clusters transitioned from control to intervention surveillance
every three months until all clusters received the intervention. Electronic randomisation
by the study statistician determined the sequence by which clusters crossed over from
control to intervention surveillance. The intervention was the addition of weekly
application of optimised SPC methods and feedback to existing traditional SSI surveillance
methods. Epidemiologists were blinded to hospital identity and randomisation status
while adjudicating SPC signals of increased SSI rates, but blinding was not possible
during SSI investigations. The primary outcome was the overall SSI prevalence rate
(PR=SSIs/100 procedures), evaluated via generalised estimating equations with a Poisson
regression model. Secondary outcomes compared traditional and optimised SPC signals
that identified SSI rate increases, including the number of formal SSI investigations
generated and deficiencies identified in best practices for SSI prevention. This trial
was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03075813.<h4>Findings</h4>Between Mar 1,
2016, and Feb 29, 2020, 204,233 unique patients underwent 237,704 surgical procedures.
148,365 procedures received traditional SSI surveillance and feedback alone, and 89,339
procedures additionally received the intervention of optimised SPC surveillance. The
primary outcome of SSI was assessed for all procedures performed within participating
clusters. SSIs occurred after 1171 procedures assigned control surveillance (prevalence
rate [PR] 0.79 per 100 procedures), compared to 781 procedures that received the intervention
(PR 0·87 per 100 procedures; model-based PR ratio 1.10, 95% CI 0.94-1.30, p=0.25). Traditional surveillance generated 24 formal SSI investigations that identified
120 SSIs with deficiencies in two or more perioperative best practices for SSI prevention.
In comparison, optimised SPC surveillance generated 74 formal investigations that
identified 458 SSIs with multiple best practice deficiencies.<h4>Interpretation</h4>The
addition of optimised SPC methods and feedback to traditional methods for SSI surveillance
led to greater detection of important SSI rate increases and best practice deficiencies
but did not decrease SSI rates. Additional research is needed to determine how to
best utilise SPC methods and feedback to improve adherence to SSI quality measures
and prevent SSIs.<h4>Funding</h4>Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Healthcare-associated infection surveillanceRandomised controlled trial
Statistical process control
Surgical site infection
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26177Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101698Publication Info
Baker, Arthur W; Ilieş, Iulian; Benneyan, James C; Lokhnygina, Yuliya; Foy, Katherine
R; Lewis, Sarah S; ... Anderson, Deverick J (2022). Early recognition and response to increases in surgical site infections using optimised
statistical process control charts-The early 2RIS trial: A multicentre stepped wedge
cluster randomised controlled trial. EClinicalMedicine, 54. pp. 101698. 10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101698. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26177.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Arthur Wakefield Baker
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Sarah Stamps Lewis
Associate Professor of Medicine
Yuliya Vladimirovna Lokhnygina
Associate Professor of Biostatistics & Bioinformatics
Statistical methods in clinical trials, survival analysis, adaptive designs, adaptive
treatment strategies, causal inference in observational studies, semiparametric inference
Christopher Ritchie Mantyh
Professor of Surgery
Neurogenic inflammation Ulcerative colitis Crohn's disease Neuropeptides Receptors
Vanilloid receptor Substance P Intestinal motility Colorectal cancer outcomes Colon
cancer Rectal cancer
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