Postoperative infection of male posterior urethral stenosis with pelvic fracture: A retrospective study from a Chinese tertiary referral center

2021 
Abstract Objectives To investigate the risk factors for postoperative infection, including systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis and surgical site infection, after posterior urethral anastomosis for the treatment of male posterior urethral stenosis with pelvic fractures. Methods We retrospectively analyzed data from patients who underwent transperineal end-to-end anastomotic urethroplasty between January 2016 and December 2018. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze patient characteristics and perioperative features. Univariate analysis was performed to identify prognostic factors associated with postoperative infection. Multivariate analysis was used to identify independent risk factors for postoperative infection. Results Among 261 patients included in the analysis, 16.48% had SIRS, 3.83% had sepsis, and 8.05% had SSI. The primary results suggested that penile septum separation, inferior pubic resection, operating duration, preoperative urine culture result, preoperative waiting time, urethral stenosis length, and draining method were significant predictors of postoperative infections. Multivariate analysis revealed that more complex surgical procedures, operating duration and positive urine culture results were independent risk factors for SIRS and preoperative positive urine culture result was an independent risk factor for sepsis and SSI. Conclusions Positive preoperative urine culture was the main risk factor for postoperative infections. More complex surgical procedures, such as penile septum separation and inferior pubic resection, and longer operating duration were more likely to be associated with postoperative SIRS.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    20
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []