Penetrating trauma to the spine with resultant spinal and paraspinal infection represents a potentially devastating injury for which there is little consensus regarding management. The duration, route and type of antibiotics required to prevent infections such as epidural abscess, vertebral osteomyelitis, and discitis is remain controversial. Several studies support standard prophylactic antimicrobial treatment for 48 hours following penetrating spinal trauma while others demonstrate that extended therapy for one week or greater is necessary to reduce risk of infection. However, there is no established protocol or consensus for management. Our systematic review aims to determine the ideal duration of antibiotics following penetrating spine trauma. Three databases (PubMed, SCOPUS, and Ovid) were queried using the following keywords: penetrating spine trauma, spine infection, spine trauma antibiotics. Nine articles were found to meet the inclusion criteria for this systematic review. The majority of studies included in final analysis discussed penetrating spinal trauma in the form of gunshot wounds. 459 patients were included in total across all studies and 21 patients developed spinal or paraspinal infection (4.58%). Five studies demonstrated an infection rate below 5% with antibiotic therapy for 5 days or longer while 2 more recent studies demonstrated a similar infection rate in their cohort with only 48 hours of antimicrobial prophylaxis. Our systematic review finds a low rate of paraspinal and spinal infections following penetrating spine trauma. As all studies included are retrospective in nature, no definitive recommendations can be made regarding duration of therapy. Forty-eight hours of antimicrobial prophylaxis may be sufficient for most patients except for those with trans-colonic injuries as these are associated with a greater contamination and risk for spinal infection.
Keywords: Spine trauma; antibiotics; penetrating.
2020 Journal of Spine Surgery. All rights reserved.