Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip Clinical Trial
Official title:
Visibility of Site Marking for Surgical Time Out With Two Different Skin Preparation Solutions
Skin preparation solutions are used to clean the skin of the patient before surgery to
decrease the rate of infection. This is particularly important for hip replacement to reduce
the risk of prosthetic joint infection. The use of a mark on the skin for site
identification has become the standard of care to decrease wrong site surgery. The Joint
Commission has mandated site identification as part of the surgical "time-out". This
procedure is also mandated by hospital policy.
Preliminary work on cadaveric skin shows that the type of skin preparation can erase the
mark used for surgical site identification. Erasure of the mark presents the surgeon with
difficulty in performing the site identification. Any error or lack of visualization of the
site marking could lead to catastrophic wrong site surgery.
The investigators hypothesis is that chlorhexidine based skin preparation solutions erase
site marking in comparison to iodine based skin preparation solutions. The investigators
intend to prospectively study twenty patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty. Patients
will be randomized to either a chlorhexidine based or an iodine based skin preparation
solution. These solutions are both the current gold standard of clinical care. No
differences have been shown in infection rates for total hip arthroplasty between these
solutions. The site marking will be performed by the same surgeon in a standardized manner.
The site marking will include the surgeon's three initials as per usual routine. Underneath
the initials three random initials will be placed with a horizontal line drawn underneath.
The preparation of the skin will be performed according to the manufacturer's
specifications. Digital photographs will be taken of the skin marking after skin
preparation. Photographs of the three random initials will be de-identified and placed in a
"Powerpoint" presentation form. Ten orthopaedic surgeons will then read the site markings to
identify the random initials and to tell whether the mark looks appropriate to perform a
surgical timeout. The horizontal line will be digitally analyzed using Adobe Photoshop to
quantitatively measure blackness of the mark.
Abstract:
Skin preparation solutions are used to clean the skin of the patient before surgery to
decrease the rate if infection. This is particularly important for hip replacement to reduce
the risk of prosthetic joint infection. The use of a mark on the skin for site
identification has become the standard of care to decrease wrong site surgery. The Joint
Commission has mandated site identification as part of the surgical "time-out". This
procedure is also mandated by hospital policy. Preliminary work on cadaveric skin shows that
the type of skin preparation can erase the mark used for surgical site identification.
Erasure of the mark presents the surgeon with difficulty in performing the site
identification. Any error or lack of visualization of the site marking could lead to
catastrophic wrong site surgery. Our hypothesis is that chlorhexidine based skin preparation
solutions erase site marking in comparison to iodine based skin marking solutions. We intend
to prospectively study twenty patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty to determine if the
site marking is erased by chlorhexidine based skin preparation solutions when compared to
iodine based skin preparation solutions. This information is critical to all surgeons who
must balance the risk of wound infection versus wrong site surgery.
Study Procedures:
We intend to study twenty patients of one orthopaedic surgeon (SCM) undergoing total hip
replacement in the supine position. Patients must be English speaking and of light skin
color to standardize the contrast of the site marking. The study will be discussed with the
patient in the clinic setting before the surgical date. Patients will be randomized into
either using a chlorhexidine based skin preparation solution (Chloraprep® (chlorhexidine
gluconate 2% w/v and isopropyl alcohol 70% v/v; Enturia Inc., Leawood, KS, USA)), or an
iodine based skin preparation solution (Duraprep® (Iodophor 0.7% and isopropyl alcohol 74%
w/w; 3M Healthcare, St. Paul, MN, USA)). Patients with allergies to either chlorhexidine or
iodine will not be included in the study. These solutions are both the current gold standard
of clinical care and are routinely used in the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. No
differences have been shown in infection rates for total hip arthroplasty between these
solutions.
The site marking will be performed by the surgeon in a standardized manner using the
standard marker supplied at the hospital (Sharpie Fine Point Permanent Marker, Sanford
Corporation, Oak Brook, IL, USA). All markings will be made in the pre-operative holding
area per usual routine. The site marking will be made next to the site of the incision on
the anterior thigh. The site marking will include the surgeon's three initials as per usual
routine. Underneath the surgeon's initials, three random initials will be placed with a
horizontal line drawn underneath. Twenty random three-letter combinations will be
pre-generated using MS Excel® (Microsoft Office 2003, Microsoft Corporation, Seattle WA).
After patient positioning and prior to skin preparation an extra surgical time-out and site
identification will be performed. The preparation of the skin will then be conducted
according to the manufacturer's specifications for each skin preparation solution. After
skin preparation, the solution will be allowed to dry while the patient is draped. Prior to
applying the impermeable drape to the skin, digital photographs will be taken. Specimens
will be photographed using a digital still camera (Digital Rebel XTi, Canon U.S.A., Lake
Success, NY) with a 100-mm macro lens (EF 100mm f/2.8 USM Macro Lens, Canon U.S.A.), and
ring flash (MR-14EX TTL, Canon U.S.A). The camera captures data at 10.1 megapixels and will
be set in RAW mode. The shutter speed will be set at 1/60s with an F-stop value of 4.0. The
camera was placed at a fixed distance from the skin using a tripod. After photography the
impervious drape will be placed and another surgical time-out will be performed. The
surgeon, anesthesiologist and nurse must all agree on the surgical site and it must be
confirmed with the consent form, the patient records and the radiographs.
The study will make no changes in the clinic care of the patient besides the use of an
additional time-out and the extra initials and the photograph of the site marking. The
surgical procedure will not be altered in any way.
Photographs of the three random initials will be de-identified. They will be cropped using
Adobe Photoshop CS2® (Adobe, San Jose, CA) so that only the three random initials and the
horizontal line are visible. The file will be identified by a study number only. The files
will be placed into a digital presentation (Powerpoint, Microsoft Office 2003, Microsoft
Corporation, Seattle, WA). Ten orthopaedic surgeons will then read the site markings in
random order. The surgeons will be asked to identify the initials and to tell whether the
mark looks appropriate for them to perform a surgical timeout. The horizontal line will be
digitally analyzed using Adobe Photoshop CS2® to quantitatively measure the mean gray level
of the horizontal line using the histogram tool.
Regression analysis will be performed to examine the affect of the skin preparation solution
on the ability of surgeons to correctly read the initials and their ability to identify the
site marking.
Drugs/Substances/Devices:
Two skin preparation solutions will be used for this study. Both are considered gold
standards for skin preparation and are routinely used at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical
Center. These include:
Chlorhexidine based skin preparation solution
Chloraprep® (chlorhexidine gluconate 2% w/v and isopropyl alcohol 70% v/v; Enturia Inc.,
Leawood, KS, USA)
Iodine based skin preparation solution
Duraprep® (Iodophor 0.7% and isopropyl alcohol 74% w/w; 3M Healthcare, St. Paul, MN, USA)
Study Statistics:
Primary Variables:
Identification of the random initials by the reviewing orthopaedic surgeons
Judgment of reviewing orthopaedic surgeons that the site marking is identifiable for them to
perform site identification
The mean gray level of the horizontal line
Risks:
Surgical site infection: The skin preparation of the skin will be conducting using the two
standard skin preparation solutions at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. The
preparation will be performed according to manufacturer's directions for the skin
preparation solutions. The risk of infection should not be changed by this study. This study
is not meant to investigate the rates of infection using the two preparation solutions.
Wrong site surgery: The standard protocol for site identification will be performed for all
patients. The surgeon's initials will be identified during the time-out procedure. The time
out will be performed by the nurse in the operating room according to the protocol of the
Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. The nurse will read the consent form, confirm the site
identification mark with the surgeon and the anesthesiologist. The side will be confirmed
with the radiographs and the consent form for the procedure. The time out will be performed
two times to prevent any possibility of wrong site surgery. This is a technique used by the
neurosurgical services where site marking is difficult. The site will be identified both
before and after the skin preparation.
Extra markings: The patient will have three extra initials and one horizontal line drawn
underneath the standard site marking. Site markings are with permanent marker and do take
several weeks of washing to be removed. All patients will be informed of the extra markings
as part of the study consent form. If patients do not want to have these extra markings,
they will not be included into the study.
Confidentiality:
The data from this study includes only the digital photographs of the site marking. The
photographs will have no identifying information and will be only labeled with the study
number (one to twenty). All information from this study will be de-identified data that
should not pose any confidentiality risks to the patient.
Benefits:
The benefit of this study will be to give more information about the removal of site
markings by skin preparation solutions. While the risk of wrong site surgery is currently
low, everything possible must be done to eliminate any potential for this occurring. This
study examines the marking used for total hip surgery; the risk of wrong site surgery is
higher for those surgeries involving the digits or smaller areas of the body. In these
areas, the marking must be perfect. Any elimination of the mark could result in catastrophe.
If a mark is not well visible or partially erased, a culture is created where the mark is
ignored, creating danger to the patient. If this is occurring with standard skin preparation
solutions then either the solutions or the marking must be changed in the future. We hope
that this study will help to eliminate any potential for wrong site surgery.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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