Antibiotic prophylaxis in skin surgery
Surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis ยท endocarditis prophylaxis ยท prosthetic-joint prophylaxis
Skin surgery is clean or clean-contaminated, and surgical-site infection rates are generally low (1-3% for clean skin surgery; higher for lower-leg, infrainguinal, mucosal, infected or extensive flap / graft surgery). UK practice is anchored to NICE NG125 (preventing surgical site infection), NICE CG64 (infective endocarditis prophylaxis) and dermatologic-surgery advisory guidance. Endocarditis prophylaxis is no longer routinely recommended in the UK for skin or dental procedures in most patients; prosthetic-joint prophylaxis is similarly not routine.
Principles
- Most clean skin surgery requires no antibiotic prophylaxis (NICE NG125).
- Selective prophylaxis is indicated based on host risk, anatomical site, technique and wound class.
- When indicated, prophylactic antibiotic should be given 30-60 minutes pre-incision (single dose) โ single peri-operative dose is usually sufficient.
- Continuing post-operative antibiotics is rarely justified.
- Antimicrobial stewardship: oversee with local microbiology guidance; document indication and duration.
Wound / patient indications
Site / wound considerations (AAD-ACMS 2008):
- Lower leg / below-knee surgery (SSI rate 7-15%).
- Wedge resection of lip / ear.
- Skin flap or large graft (face / scalp / lower limb).
- Inflamed tumour or ulcerated lesion (clean-contaminated).
- Mucosal / nasal / oral / anogenital incisions.
- Multistage Mohs with extensive debridement.
- Sentinel lymph-node biopsy or formal lymphadenectomy (high seroma risk).
Host considerations:
- Diabetes, obesity, peripheral vascular disease.
- Immunosuppression (HIV, transplant, biologics, ICI, chemotherapy).
- Prior MRSA colonisation.
- Active dermatitis at operative site.
- Frail / institutionalised patient.
Standard regimens
- First-line for skin surgery prophylaxis: oral cefalexin 2 g 30-60 min pre-procedure (single dose).
- Alternative: oral flucloxacillin 1 g pre-procedure; oral co-amoxiclav 625 mg for mixed flora (anogenital).
- Penicillin allergy: clindamycin 600 mg PO or clarithromycin 500 mg PO.
- MRSA carrier: vancomycin 1 g IV or doxycycline 200 mg PO; nasal decolonisation pre-op with mupirocin if known carrier.
- Anogenital / mucosal: co-amoxiclav 625 mg; or clindamycin + metronidazole if penicillin-allergic.
- Marine / fresh-water exposure: doxycycline ยฑ ceftriaxone if Vibrio risk.
- Duration: single dose pre-incision; further doses only if procedure >3 hours.
Endocarditis & prosthetic-joint prophylaxis
- NICE CG64 (2008, updated 2016): routine antibiotic prophylaxis against infective endocarditis is not recommended routinely for skin surgery in patients with prosthetic valves, congenital heart disease or prior endocarditis. UK position differs from US guidance.
- Specialist cardiology input only required for highest-risk patients (acute endocarditis history, complex congenital, prosthetic valves) when skin surgery is performed at an actively infected / inflamed site.
- Prosthetic joints: BAD / BOA position โ routine prophylaxis is not required for skin surgery, even within 2 years of arthroplasty; individualised decision in immunosuppressed / inflamed arthritis patient.
- Document the discussion and shared decision in the clinic letter and consent.
Practical points
- Hand hygiene, chlorhexidine 2% or povidone-iodine skin prep, drapes, sterile gloves and instruments are far more impactful than antibiotics for SSI prevention.
- Document pre-op antibiotic decision-making (or rationale for not giving) in the operation note.
- Counsel patients re wound-care signs of infection and where to seek help.
- Avoid "just-in-case" post-op courses โ encourage stewardship.
- For high-risk patients on biologics / ICI, multidisciplinary review can defer elective surgery if biologic trough timing permits.
References
- NICE NG125. Surgical site infections: prevention and treatment. London: NICE; 2019 (last updated 19 August 2020; reviewed 31 May 2023).
- NICE CG64. Prophylaxis against infective endocarditis. London: NICE; 2008 (updated 2016).
- Wright TI et al. Antibiotic prophylaxis in dermatologic surgery: advisory statement 2008. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2008;59:464-473.
- British Society for Dermatological Surgery. Annual Surgery Workshop Manual. London: BSDS; 2024.
- Maragh SL, Brown MD. Prospective evaluation of surgical site infection rate among patients with Mohs micrographic surgery without the use of prophylactic antibiotics. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2008;59:275-278.
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