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Clinical Trial Summary

This study aims at answering the question if aerosols from laparoscopic or open abdominal surgery contain SARS-CoV-2 virus and need to be considered contagious.


Clinical Trial Description

The CoVID-19 pandemic has led to wide spread shut down of surgical services and restrictions to emergency procedures in most European countries and the United States. Next to concerns about resource limitations this has been justified by the risk of viral transmission during surgery. As to date the virus has been isolated from several body fluids with highest viral loads in the respiratory tract but also in feces. Aerosol producing interventions such as intubation have been proven to be a common source of health care worker infections in Italy and recently in the United Kingdom and the United States. The risk of surgical smoke and steam in open and laparoscopic surgery has been considered to bear similar risk but no data concerning these aerosols has been published so far and to the knowledge of the investigators no trials are under way (www.clinicaltrials.gov 5.4.2020). Only limited data has been available for other viral infections such as Hepatitis B and Human Papilloma Virus showing that surgical aerosols have the potential to carry such infectious particles. This rational has led to conflicting recommendations by surgical societies such as the Royal College of Surgeons or the Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES) to avoid laparoscopic procedures or use special filtration systems to evacuate the smoke and aerosols from the body cavity. Since Switzerland and the city of Basel in particular currently have a high prevalence for CoVID 19 it is likely that surgeons will encounter patients with proven or suspected infection in the near future that require open or laparoscopic emergency surgical procedures. This offers the opportunity to collect a reasonable number of samples and smears from the abdominal cavity and surgical aerosols from these patients in limited time to answer the urgent question whether surgical smoke and aerosols of the abdominal cavity from CoVID-19 patients are contagious or not. Investigators consider the trial to be a risk category A according to art 7 (HRO). There is no risk for patients included in this trial since the treatment of the patients will not differ from standard care. There will be no extra tests performed and only routine data will be collected. Specimen from laparoscopic smoke filters which are a protection device for medical staff will be tested on SARS-CoV-2 contamination. Primary Objective: The primary objective of the study is to investigate the contamination of surgical smoke and aerosols with SARS-COV-2 virus particles using the viral genome as a marker during laparoscopic and open abdominal emergency procedures for patients with suspected or proven infection. Secondary objectives are to: - assess the viral load in the peritoneal cavity and fluid - compare viral load of smoke and aerosols in laparoscopic and open procedures - assess possible transmission to surgeons during their service ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04444687
Study type Observational
Source University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase
Start date August 2020
Completion date February 2021

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