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Clinical Trial Summary

Surgical site infections (SSIs) are associated with increased patient morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs. ESKAPE (Enterococcus, S. aureus, Klebsiella, Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas, and Enterobacter spp.) pathogens are particularly pathogenic because they have increased capacity to acquire resistance and virulence traits. The investigators have proven that a multifaceted program involving improved basic perioperative preventive measures can generate substantial reductions in S. aureus transmission and significant reductions in SSIs (88% reduction as compared to usual care). In this study, the investigators aim to examine the relative effectiveness of each component of this program in controlling ESKAPE transmission and reducing SSIs and to identify an optimal implementation strategy for national dissemination. Randomization occurs at the site level, and sites adopt preventative programs. This work will improve perioperative patient safety for the 51 million patients who undergo surgery each year.


Clinical Trial Description

The investigators propose to test the implementation of a multifaceted, evidence-based, peri-operative surgical site infection (SSI) preventive program that leverages basic preventive measures optimized by pathogen cluster detection software (surveillance) to reduce ESKAPE (Enterococcus, S. aureus, Klebsiella, Acinetobacter, Pseudomonas, and Enterobacter spp.) transmission and SSIs. SSIs increase patient morbidity, prolong hospitalization, and increase the risk of death. ESKAPE pathogens are particularly problematic because they have increased capacity to acquire resistance and virulence traits. For example, S. aureus explains a significant proportion of SSIs. S. aureus transmission can be detected in 39% of surgical cases, has been directly linked to up to 50% of S. aureus SSIs by single nucleotide variant analysis, and is tightly associated with SSI development across a variety of surgical specialties. The isolation of ≥ 1 KAPE isolate from ≥ 1 intraoperative reservoir is associated with increased risk of infection development. The investigators have proven that improvements in basic perioperative preventive measures can generate substantial and sustained reductions in perioperative S. aureus transmission and SSIs, with the magnitude of the effect exceeding that of SSI preventive efforts focused on host optimization and inhibition of bacterial virulence strategies, the status quo. However, perioperative application of these basic preventive measures has been inconsistent, and some evidence suggests that S. aureus explains 20% of SSIs. Thus, there remains room for further advancement in perioperative infection control by addressing other ESKAPE organisms and by delineating an implementation approach that will yield effective, national dissemination of these proven measures. The investigators planned approach to address these pathogens mirrors our approach for perioperative S. aureus control, integrating evidence-based provider hand hygiene, intravascular catheter design/handling, environmental cleaning/organization, and patient decolonization improvement strategies with surveillance. The investigators surveillance approach maps the epidemiology of transmission of each pathogen, identifying for example, reservoirs of origin that become improvement targets for sustainability. While this approach is proven effective in preventing perioperative S. aureus transmission and SSIs, the relative effectiveness of the various components of the multi-faceted approach in reducing ESKAPE transmission and associated SSIs, as well as an effective national dissemination strategy, remain unknown. Therefore, the overall objectives for this study are to examine the relative effectiveness of each programmatic component in controlling ESKAPE spread and associated SSIs and to identify the best approach for national dissemination of this technology. The investigators will use a cluster-randomized design to evaluate the implementation and sustainability of each approach guided by RE-AIM framework. More broadly, these findings will be relevant to supporting hospital's implementation of a wide array of preventive interventions and has potential for vastly improving patient care and outcomes. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04600973
Study type Interventional
Source Trustees of Dartmouth College
Contact Jeremiah R Brown, PhD
Phone 603-646-5409
Email jbrown@dartmouth.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date July 1, 2021
Completion date June 30, 2026

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