Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05000723 |
Other study ID # |
S65804 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 14, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
December 2099 |
Study information
Verified date |
October 2023 |
Source |
Universitaire Ziekenhuizen KU Leuven |
Contact |
Georges Vles, MD, PhD |
Phone |
016340888 |
Email |
georges.vles[@]uzleuven.be |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational [Patient Registry]
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Prosthetic Joint Infection (PJI) of a Total Hip Replacement (THR) is a disastrous
complication of an otherwise extremely successful surgical procedure. It is associated with a
burdensome treatment for the patient, significant challenges for the medical team and high
costs for society. As more joint replacements are being performed each year, due to an ageing
population and lower thresholds for surgery, the number of PJIs is on the rise. Many of these
patients will be referred to University Hospitals Leuven as the physicians have extensive
experience with this particular pathology and can offer a multidisciplinary and
patient-tailored treatment. Many controversies exist in the field of PJI treatment, both with
regard to the surgical aspects as well as the antibiotic treatment. Setting up randomized
controlled trials to answer these questions has been proven to be very difficult due to large
variations in patients, implants, germs, soft and hard tissues, antibiotic resistance
patterns, and so on. Also, surgery for PJIs is usually non-elective / semi-urgent and
therefore time to include patients into different trials is limited. Therefore the
investigators will prospectively collect data on patients with PJI treated at University
Hospitals Leuven, starting 01/01/2022, in order to have knowledge of own results and inform
patients about chances of success prior to treatment; perform internal audits and quality
checks; answer questions in the field of PJI treatment not suitable for RCTs.
Description:
Prosthetic Joint Infection (PJI) of a Total Hip Replacement (THR) is a disastrous
complication of an otherwise extremely successful surgical procedure. It is associated with a
burdensome treatment for the patient, significant challenges for the medical team and high
costs for society. As more joint replacements are being performed each year, due to an ageing
population and lower thresholds for surgery, the number of PJIs is on the rise. Many of these
patients will be referred to University Hospitals Leuven as the physicians have extensive
experience with this particular pathology and can offer a multidisciplinary and
patient-tailored treatment.
Many controversies exist in the field of PJI treatment, both with regard to the surgical
aspects as well as the antibiotic treatment. Setting up randomized controlled trials to
answer these questions has been proven to be very difficult due to large variations in
patients, implants, germs, soft and hard tissues, antibiotic resistance patterns, and so on.
Also, surgery for PJIs is usually non-elective / semi-urgent and therefore time to include
patients into different trials is limited.
Nevertheless, prospectively collecting data on patients with PJI who are not involved in RCTs
can already be helpful. It would allow the investigators to provide the patients with
percentages of success of certain interventions based on historical results. At the moment
the investigators have to rely on results reported by other groups, who might use different
techniques or a facing a different germ spectrum.
Furthermore, prospectively collecting data on this cohort of patients, would make it possible
for the investigators to do internal audits for quality control. Being able to perform simple
checks, for example is every patient discussed in the multi-disciplinary team meeting, or is
the hospital switching to targeted antibiotics soon enough, would already add to the quality
of the service and could lead to adjustments in the protocols.
Also, certain scientific questions, which do not lend themselves to RCTs, such as the rate of
success of treatment of PJI caused by rare germs (e.g. fungi) or in a specific population
(e.g. octogenarians, transplant patients), could be answered by maintaining a prospective
database