Surgical Wound Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Sutures vs Staples for Wound Closure in Orthopaedic Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Trial
The trial is a randomized, controlled trial. Adult patients undergoing orthopaedic surgical procedures would be randomized to one of two groups for surgical wound closure, skin sutures or skin staples. The primary outcome measures would be surgical site infection indicated by the use of oral or intravenous antibiotics for suspected wound infection and/or re-operation at the same site. Patients would be followed up as per their usual post-operative course for a total of three months in the trauma and spine population and six months in the total joint arthroplasty population. It is hypothesized that wounds closed with sutures and staples will have similar infection rates as defined by the use of antibiotics or reoperation.
To date, there is no clear consensus on the method that is best for closure of surgical
wounds in orthopaedic surgery. Orthopaedic surgeons have a multitude of wound closure habits.
A recent meta-analysis comparing staples to sutures in wound closure demonstrated a
three-fold increase in infection in stapled wounds compared to sutured wounds. The studies
used in the meta-analysis were primarily of poor methodological quality.
A large, well-designed randomized, controlled trial is needed to guide orthopedic surgeons in
their choice of wound closure materials. This study would attempt to provide information on
the use of sutures versus skin staples and the effect on the development of surgical site
infections in adults undergoing orthopaedic procedures.
A parallel group randomized controlled trial with institutional review board approval will be
conducted. Patients will be randomized intraoperatively to have skin wounds closed with
sutures or staples. Dressings will be used to maintain blinding of participants and outcome
assessors. The primary outcome measure will be infections adjudicated by a blinded data
safety monitoring committee. Suspected infections will be defined by: Use of antibiotics or
reoperation for infection at the operative site within three months (six months for
arthroplasty subgroup) The independent review, board blinded to treatment assignment, will
adjudicate suspected infections based on clinical data. A cost analysis will also be
performed to compare the costs associated with wounds closed with sutures and staples from a
health care institution perspective.
All data will be analyzed by a blinded epidemiologist. Dichotomous primary and secondary
outcome measures will be analyzed using the Chi-squared statistic. Continuous outcome
measures will be analyzed using Student's t-test. Subgroup analysis will compare infection
rates using sutures versus staples in each anatomic area (upper extremity, pelvis/acetabulum,
hip/femur, knee, ankle). A further subgroup analysis will be conducted comparing trauma
patients to elective patients. Non-infected revision surgery will also be compared to primary
surgery.
It is hypothesized that wounds closed with sutures and staples will have similar infection
rates as defined by the use of antibiotics or reoperation.
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