EmergencySurgicalICD-10 M72.6

Necrotising fasciitis

NF ยท Fournier gangrene (perineal) ยท Meleney synergistic gangrene ยท necrotising soft-tissue infection (NSTI)

Necrotising fasciitis is a rapidly progressive deep soft-tissue infection involving subcutaneous fat and fascia, with high mortality (~20-30%) requiring emergency surgical debridement. Recognition is challenging because early signs are non-specific and overlap with cellulitis. In skin-oncology practice it can complicate immunosuppressed patients (ICI, chemotherapy, advanced disease), post-operative wounds, lymphoedematous limbs and ulcerated tumour sites. LRINEC and SIARI scores aid triage. UK NCEPOD reviews emphasise early surgical involvement.

CurrentLast reviewed 16 May 2026

Classification

  • Type I (polymicrobial, ~70%) โ€” mixed aerobic and anaerobic flora; elderly, diabetic, immunosuppressed; Fournier gangrene (perineal) is a subtype.
  • Type II (monomicrobial, ~25%) โ€” Group A streptococcus (S. pyogenes) ยฑ Staphylococcus aureus including MRSA; younger; toxic shock syndrome.
  • Type III โ€” Gram-negative including marine (Vibrio vulnificus), Aeromonas; cirrhotic / immunosuppressed; rapid systemic toxicity.
  • Type IV โ€” fungal (Mucorales, Candida); diabetic / immunosuppressed / post-traumatic.

Clinical features

  • Early (high index of suspicion):
    • Pain out of proportion to clinical findings.
    • Erythema with rapidly expanding indurated edge.
    • Systemic features โ€” fever, tachycardia, malaise.
    • Tense oedema beyond visible erythema.
  • Late (advanced โ€” surgical emergency now):
    • Dusky / violaceous / mottled skin.
    • Haemorrhagic / serous bullae.
    • Crepitus (subcutaneous gas).
    • Skin anaesthesia from cutaneous nerve necrosis.
    • Sepsis / shock; multi-organ failure.
  • Skin-oncology contexts:
    • Ulcerated tumour site (locally advanced cSCC, fungating breast, sarcoma).
    • Post-operative wound, particularly in immunosuppressed.
    • Lymphoedematous limb on chemotherapy / ICI.
    • Fournier gangrene complicating vulval / penile / scrotal SCC.

LRINEC and SIARI scoring

LRINEC score (Laboratory Risk Indicator for Necrotising Fasciitis) โ€” calculated from admission bloods:

  • CRP ≥150 (4 points)
  • WBC 15-25 (1) / >25 (2)
  • Hb 11-13.5 (1) / <11 (2)
  • Sodium <135 (2)
  • Creatinine >141 (2)
  • Glucose >10 (1)

Total 0-13; โ‰ฅ6 raises suspicion; โ‰ฅ8 strongly suggests NF. Caveat: low LRINEC does not exclude NF; clinical judgement supersedes.

SIARI: more discriminative recent UK-based score combining Site (perineum / lower limb), Immunosuppression, Age, Renal function, Inflammatory markers.

Investigations

  • Do not delay surgery for imaging when clinical suspicion is high.
  • Bloods: FBC, U&E, LFT, CRP, glucose, lactate, ABG, coagulation, group & save, blood cultures.
  • Imaging only if diagnostic uncertainty and patient stable:
    • Plain radiograph โ€” subcutaneous gas (late, ~25% sensitive).
    • CT โ€” fascial thickening, gas, fluid; better sensitivity.
    • MRI โ€” most sensitive but slow.
  • Bedside "finger test": under local anaesthesia, small incision; lack of resistance with dishwater-grey fluid and easy finger-dissection of fascia is pathognomonic โ€” proceed straight to theatre.

Management

  • Emergency surgical debridement โ€” the single most important intervention. Delay >12 h dramatically increases mortality. Aggressive radical excision of all non-viable tissue until bleeding healthy tissue; planned second-look in 24-48 h.
  • Empirical broad-spectrum IV antibiotics:
    • Meropenem 1 g IV TDS or piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5 g IV QDS.
    • + Clindamycin 900 mg IV TDS / every 8 hours (antitoxin effect against streptococci).
    • + Vancomycin / linezolid for MRSA coverage.
    • + Doxycycline for Vibrio if marine exposure.
    • Antifungal (amphotericin) for type IV.
  • Critical care: fluid resuscitation, vasopressors, inotropes, organ support; IVIG considered for Group A strep TSS.
  • Reconstruction: large defects โ€” staged with NPWT, dermal substitutes (e.g. Integra), STSG / flap reconstruction; perineal disease may need temporary diversion stoma.
  • Multidisciplinary team: emergency general surgery, plastics, ID, ICU, microbiology, nutrition, pain, rehabilitation.
  • Hyperbaric oxygen therapy โ€” adjunctive, evidence mixed; consider if accessible.
  • Long-term: high morbidity โ€” limb loss, body image, psychological impact, post-traumatic stress; rehabilitation team essential.

References

  1. Stevens DL et al. Practice guidelines for the diagnosis and management of skin and soft tissue infections. Clin Infect Dis. 2014;59:e10-e52.
  2. Wong CH et al. The LRINEC (Laboratory Risk Indicator for Necrotising Fasciitis) score. Crit Care Med. 2004;32:1535-1541.
  3. Sullivan TP et al. SIARI score: a new diagnostic score for necrotising fasciitis. Br J Surg. 2022;109:1131-1136.
  4. NCEPOD. Necrotising soft tissue infections: time matters. London: NCEPOD; 2024.
  5. NICE NG141. Cellulitis and erysipelas: antimicrobial prescribing. London: NICE; 2019.

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