Sinusitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pilot Study To Evaluate A Pharmacologically Active Nasal Sponge Following
This study will compare the incidence of post-op infection after sinus surgery using conventional post-op oral antibiotics to the incidence of infection after sinus surgery when a bio-resorbable antibiotic soaked nasal sponge is used in the nasal cavity in lieu of post-op oral antibiotics. The nasal sponge is a routine nasal dressing used after sinus surgery and will therefore be placed in all patients.
Sinusitis affects 37 million people each year making it one of the most common health
problems in the United States. It has a large impact in direct healthcare expenditures,
significant loss of workplace productivity and a greater impact on quality of life than
diabetes or congestive heart failure.
The most frequently used treatments are medications and/or Functional Endoscopic Sinus
Surgery(FESS). 100 subjects undergoing ESS will participate, randomized into two groups,
treatment and control. All subjects will have a Nasopore sponge placed into the middle
meatus of the nose at the end of the procedure(The sponge is FDA approved and commonly used.
Subjects in the treatment group will receive a Nasopore sponge soaked in Bacitracin
solution. These subjects will not receive oral antibiotics post-operatively. The control
group subjects will have a saline soaked Nasopore sponge laced during surgery and will
receive routine oral antibiotics post-operatively. The hypothesis is that subjects who
receive the antibiotic soaked nasal sponge in lieu of saline soaked nasal sponge will have
infection rates comparable to those who receive systemic antibiotics, but because they will
not receive systemic antibiotics, the treated group will have fewer side effects and the
cost to treat them will be less.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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