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Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery logoLink to Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery
. 2013 Feb;16(2):141–142. doi: 10.1093/icvts/ivs507

eComment. The devil is in the detail!

Shahzad G Raja 1
PMCID: PMC3548546  PMID: 23334737

I read with great interest the quasi-experimental single-centre prospective cohort study conducted by Birgand et al. [1] evaluating the efficacy of a gentamicin-collagen sponge in decreasing deep sternal-wound infections in high-risk cardiac surgery patients. Interstingly, in their experience gentamicin-collagen sponge was not effective in preventing deep sternal wound infections in high-risk patients. This is contrary to our own experience [2] and the most plausible explanation for the conflicting results lies in the technique of using the gentamicin-collagen sponge.

Birgand and associates dipped the sponge in normal saline solution for a few seconds prior to implantation [1]. This manoeuvre of wetting the gentamicin-collagen sponge impacts on the gentamicin content of the implant and affects its potential antibacterial efficacy. Lovering and colleague [3] have recently shown that that even a short period of dipping of gentamicin-collagen sponge, before insertion into the patient, results in a significant loss of gentamicin which may be of clinical significance. They demonstrated that after a very short immersion period there was significant loss of gentamicin from the implants with a mean loss of 6.7% at 2 s, increasing to 40.5% at 1 min and essentially total loss by 6 h of immersion. Loss of gentamicin followed a complex elution profile, with elution half-lives ranging from 50 s on initial immersion to 99 min late in the elution period.

It is very clear from the study of Lovering et al. [3] as well as from our own experience [2] that attention to detail will possibly result in different outcomes thereby minimising studies with conflicting results.

Conflict of interest: none declared

References

  • 1.Birgand G, Radu C, Alkhoder S, Al Attar N, Raffoul R, Dilly MP, et al. Does a gentamicin-impregnated collagen sponge reduce sternal wound infections in high-risk cardiac surgerypatients? Interact CardioVasc Thorac Surg. 2012 doi: 10.1093/icvts/ivs449. doi:10.1093/icvts/ivs449. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 2.Raja SG, Salhiyyah K, Rafiq MU, Felderhof J, Amrani M. Impact of gentamicin-collagen sponge (collatamp) on the incidence of sternal wound infection in high-risk cardiac surgery patients: a propensity score analysis. Heart Surg Forum. 2012;15:e257–61. doi: 10.1532/HSF98.20121032. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 3.Lovering AM, Sunderland J. Impact of soaking gentamicin- containing collagen implants on potential antimicrobial efficacy. Int J Surg. 2012;10(Suppl 1):S2–4. doi: 10.1016/j.ijsu.2012.05.013. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

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