Aims. To determine whether there is any difference in infection rate
at 90 days between trauma operations performed in laminar flow and
plenum ventilation, and whether infection risk is altered following
the installation of laminar flow (LF). Patients and Methods. We assessed the impact of plenum ventilation (PV) and LF on the
rate of infection for patients undergoing orthopaedic trauma operations.
All NHS hospitals in England with a trauma theatre(s) were contacted
to identify the ventilation system which was used between April
2008 and March 2013 in the following categories: always LF, never
LF, installed LF during study period (subdivided: before, during
and after installation) and unknown. For each operation, age, gender,
comorbidity, socio-economic deprivation, number of previous trauma
operations and surgical site infection within 90 days (SSI90) were
extracted from England’s national hospital administrative Hospital
Episode Statistics database. Crude and adjusted odds ratios (OR)
were used to compare ventilation groups using hierarchical logistic
regression. Subanalysis was performed for hip hemiarthroplasties. Results. A total of 803 065 trauma operations were performed during this
time; 19 hospitals installed LF, 124 already had LF, 13 had PV and
the type of ventilation was unknown in 28. Patient characteristics
were similar between the groups. The rate of SSI90 was similar for
always LF and PV (2.7% and 2.4%). For hemiarthroplasties of the
hip, the rates of SSI90 were significantly higher for LF compared
with PV (3.8% and 2.6%, OR 1.45, p = 0·001). Hospitals installing
LF did not see any statistically significant change in the rate
of SSI90. Conclusion. The results of this observational study imply that infection
rate is similar when orthopaedic trauma surgery is performed in
LF and PV, and is unchanged by installing LF in a previously PV
theatre. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2016;98-B:1262–9