Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Withdrawn
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02558764 |
Other study ID # |
001 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Withdrawn |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 7, 2016 |
Est. completion date |
March 10, 2017 |
Study information
Verified date |
September 2015 |
Source |
Nova Scotia Health Authority |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Advances in surgical techniques and immunosuppression (IS) have led to an appreciable
reduction in postoperative complications following kidney transplantation. However, surgical
site events (SSE) including surgical site infections (SSI) and other wound complications are
still very common and they can limit these improved outcomes and result in prolonged
hospitalization, hospital readmission and reoperation, consequently increasing overall
transplant cost.
Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is a concept introduced initially to assist in the
treatment of chronic open wounds. This technique uses a negative pressure unit and specific
dressings that help to hold the incision edges together, redistribute lateral tension, reduce
edema, stimulate perfusion and protect the surgical site from external infectious sources.
Thus, it provides faster wound healing and shortens hospital stay.
Recently, there has been growing interest in using portable NPWT devices on closed incisions
after surgery to prevent potential SSI and other wound complications in high-risk patients.
Investigations regarding this technique in various surgical settings have shown that it can
reduce the risk of SSI and other wound complications. These studies concluded that any
patient undergoing transplantation should be considered as 'high-risk' and should receive
this treatment.
To date, no studies are reported in literature exploring the effects of preventive use of
portable NPWT devices on surgical wounds in the setting of organ transplantation. The aim of
our study is to compare a portable NPWT device (PICO, Smith & Nephew, London UK) to
conventional gauze dressings in patients undergoing kidney transplantation (KT) surgery.
Description:
Patients admitted to our transplant surgery inpatient floor for cadaveric kidney transplant
surgery will be reviewed with the circle of care team and approached for consent if deemed
suitable for this trial. A Nova Scotia Health Authority Research Ethics Board approved
informed consent form will be utilized in the consent discussion and patients will be
provided time to read the document in full before being asked for a decision on
participation.
Patients who give their consent for the study will be randomized to 'PICO' or 'Control'
group. The randomization process will be held during the time period between the admission of
the patient to the inpatient floor and referral of the patient to the operating room.
Randomization process will be conducted by the transplant fellow or the research associate
who will randomly pick an envelope from a box full of 60 same-sized, same-colored and closed
envelopes each time a patient gives consent. Among those 60 envelopes 30 will have the 'PICO'
card inside, while the remaining 30 envelopes will have 'control' card. Assignment process
will be completed when 30 consecutive patients are included in each group. There will be 1
control per case.
For both patient groups the surgical wound closure procedure will be the same: At the end of
each cadaveric kidney transplant procedure the wound edges will be approximated by means of
running subcuticular suture with non-absorbable stitches (3/0 polypropylene/polyethylene).
For patients randomized to the 'PICO' group, PICO will be applied in the operating room
immediately after closure and the continuous negative pressure set at -80 mmHg.
For patients randomized to the control group standard of care basic wound contact absorbent
dressings will be applied in the operating room immediately after the closure of the surgical
wound.
Follow-up care:
Control Group patients will have the surgical site dressing changed sterilely when too wet,
and then removed after 48 hours post op. At this time the wound will be left exposed if no
complications occur.
PICO group patients will keep the device in place for 7 days, and then have it removed on
post-operative day 7. PICO Dressing replacement will be performed in cases where the dressing
becomes too wet before day 7.
All patients will receive antibiotic prophylaxis 60 minutes before surgery as per our routine
protocol: Cefazolin (1-2 gram) IV will be given as the first-choice antibiotic. Clindamycin
(600-900 mg) IV will be given to penicillin-allergic patients.
Data regarding following parameters will be collected for each recipient: Age at the time of
transplant surgery, gender, diabetic status, pre-transplant dialysis status
(preemptive/hemodialysis/peritoneal dialysis), body mass index/ pre-transplant weight,
pre-operative serum albumin level, Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) mismatch status, panel
reactive antibody (PRA) , functional status of the graft (immediate graft function / delayed
graft function) and in-hospital stay.
Following variables regarding KT surgery and allograft will be collected: Date of KT surgery,
donor age, cadaveric donor type (brain death/cardiac death), cold ischemia time, warm
ischemia time and operative time.
SSE will be evaluated on post-operative days 3, 7 and 30. Data on minor and major wound
complications (superficial wound dehiscence, evisceration, seromas, incisional hernias, wound
infections and wound necrosis) collected over the first 30 postoperative days will be
recorded on follow-up forms by the same researcher. These data will include information
regarding the type of the wound complication, whether or not an intervention was required and
type and number of the interventions (therapeutic vacuum-assisted closure, percutaneous
drainage and re-operation).
PICO and conventional dressing (control) groups will be compared in terms of afore-mentioned
"wound complication risk factors" and descriptive "recipient, donor and allograft"
parameters. Subsequently, investigators are planning to proceed with comparison of the
outcomes among these two groups. Statistical analysis methods described below will be used
for comparison of the groups in terms of the rates of wound complications and wound
complication-related intervention and re-operation rates.
8. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS A) Power calculation There will be 1 control assigned per case. Prior
data indicate that the failure (wound complication) rate among controls is 0.25. Findings of
the previous studies regarding preventive PICO application correspond to a true relative risk
of 2.5. Relevant power calculation analysis suggests assignment of 26 experimental and 26
control subjects ((to be able to reject the null hypothesis that relative risk equals 1 with
probability (power) 0.8)).
The Type I error probability associated with this test of this null hypothesis is 0.05. An
uncorrected chi-squared statistic will be used to evaluate this null hypothesis.
B) Analysis of data Results will be expressed as mean ± standard deviation. Categorical data
will be compared using 2-tailed Fisher's exact test or Chi-squared test. Continuous variables
will be compared using Mann-Whitney test. p < 0.05 will be considered statistically
significant. Statistical analyses will be performed with computer software (SAS for Windows,
version 9.2).