Practice preference and evidence analysis on topical use of tobramycin powder in lumbar spine surgery. A multi-national AO Spine Survey with Systematic Review of literature

Muthu, Sathish and Sotoris, Veranis and Gary, Matthew and Cho, Samuel K and Kato, So and Lewis, Stephen J and Kim, Hyeun Sung and Wang, Jeffrey C. and Jain, Amit and Yoon, Timothy S Practice preference and evidence analysis on topical use of tobramycin powder in lumbar spine surgery. A multi-national AO Spine Survey with Systematic Review of literature. In: Global Spine Congress 2024, Bangkok, Thailand.

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Abstract

Introduction: There is an increasing interest in the topical use of antibiotics to prevent infection following spine surgery. To extend the antibiotic coverage to the gram-negative spectrum, the usage of tobramycin powder is being considered. We surveyed to analyze the current practice preference on the use of topical tobramycin in lumbar spine surgery and also aimed to analyze the literature for current evidence on the same. Methods: A multinational cross-sectional survey was conducted among AO Spine members worldwide to understand the use of topical tobramycin in 1 or 2-level open lumbar fusion surgeries. Also, an independent systematic review of four scientific databases (PubMed, Scopus, clinicaltrials.gov,Web of Science) was performed by two authors to identify relevant articles in adherence to the preferred reporting in systematic reviews and meta-analysis (PRISMA) guidelines. Studies reporting the usage of tobramycin in lumbar spine surgeries were included for analysis. Results: Among the 231 participating surgeons, only 1.7%(n = 4) reported utilizing tobramycin in 1 or 2-level open lumbar fusion surgery. Upon systematic review of the literature, two studies with 484 patients were included for analysis. With the usage of tobramycin as a topical antibiotic powder, both studies noted a reduction in the incidence of infection with change in the spectrum of infective organisms. Conclusion: Topical Tobramycin is not the common choice of topical antibiotic among surgeons worldwide. There is a lack of sufficient evidence in the literature to support the routine use of topical tobramycin in lumbar spine surgery.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Subjects: AO Spine
Research Methods
Spine Surgery
Infections
Divisions: Orthopaedic Surgery
Depositing User: Mr Repository Admin
Date Deposited: 01 Jan 2026 05:42
Last Modified: 01 Jan 2026 05:42
URI: https://ir.orthopaedicresearchgroup.com/id/eprint/358

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