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Clinical Trial Summary

This study prospectively selects the patients to examine the effectiveness of the investigators' current standard of prophylaxis prior to vascular surgery and to compare the effectiveness of vancomycin and daptomycin plus cefazolin in reducing infections in vascular surgical patients.


Clinical Trial Description

According to Medqic.org (site for the Surgical Care Improvement Project) the current recommended drug of choice for prophylaxis prior to vascular surgery is Cefazolin (Ancef). The exception would be to allow the use of Vancomycin as an acceptable antibiotic for patients undergoing cardiac, vascular or orthopedic surgery due to the increasing risk of methicillin-resistantStaphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The significance of the study is to demonstrate that MRSA coverage is needed in vascular surgery with prosthetic graft placement in areas of the body that is at high risk for infection. By decreasing post surgical site and prosthetic infections, we could significantly reduce vascular surgery mortality and morbidity. Cost and amputation rates we feel could also be reduced. patients will be randomized in three groups such as cefazolin,vancomycin and cefazolin, daptomycin and cefazolin and then patients will be monitored per usual post-operative course (30 days and 90 days follow-up) with wound and incision evaluation. Outcome measures include hospital length of stay, the presence of a graft infection, skin infection at incision site, vascular procedure failure secondary to infection, cost, thirty day readmits, amputation, and mortality. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00967941
Study type Observational
Source CAMC Health System
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date August 2007
Completion date August 2010

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT01255943 - Testing Spread and Implementation of Novel Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcal Aureus (MRSA)-Reducing Practices