Overview
The incidence of surgical-site infection (SSI) and complications related to wound healing reaches 10-20% of gynecological cancer patients. Each complication may dramatically prolong the hospitalization period and increase the economic burden of hospital care. Appropriate wound care and tissue oxygenation are of special importance for wound healing. Assuming adequate perfusion, the easiest, safest, and most effective way to improve tissue oxygenation is to increase the fraction of inspired oxygen. However, there is considerable controversy as to whether supplemental oxygen actually reduces SSI and healing-related complications as to date, there is absence of relevant data.
Description
This study aims to investigate the prophylactic value of postoperative oxygen administration against the development of wound infections in obese gynecological oncology patients undergoing laparotomy for the treatment of endometrial or ovarian cancer. At the same time, the factors that lead to an increase in this risk will be outlined.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Obese (BMI>30kg/m2) gynecological cancer patients
- Optimized preoperative CBC values (hemoglobin >11g/dl, WBC 4.000-11.000 X 109/L, platelets 150,000 to 400,000 X 109/L)
- In the case of neoadjuvant therapy an interval longer than three weeks between the last cycle and the operation
Exclusion Criteria:
- Active immunosuppresion
- Preexisting infection of the abdominal wall
- Preexisting sepsis