Surgical Site Infection Clinical Trial
— C/SOAPOfficial title:
Cesarean Section Optimal Antibiotic Prophylaxis Trial
The Cesarean Section Optimal Antibiotic Prophylaxis (C/SOAP) study is a large pragmatic
multi-center randomized clinical trial designed to evaluate the comparative effectiveness
and safety of azithromycin-based extended-spectrum antibiotic prophylaxis (azithromycin plus
standard narrow-spectrum cephalosporin) relative to standard single-agent cephalosporin
(preferably prior to surgical incision) to prevent post-cesarean infection.
Hypothesis: Compared to narrow-spectrum prophylaxis (i.e. cefazolin alone, or clindamycin if
cephalosporin allergy) prior to surgical incision, the addition of extended-spectrum
prophylaxis (azithromycin + cefazolin) reduces the incidence of post-cesarean infection.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 2013 |
Est. completion date | December 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 14 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: Pregnant Women aged 14 years and over at = 24 weeks' viable gestation who will undergo unscheduled/non-elective cesareans with either: 1. Labor (spontaneous or induced): active labor (ongoing contractions and at least 4cm dilated or contractions for at least 4 hours with documented cervical change of =1cm dilatation or =50% effacement), or 2. Membrane rupture (standardized to duration of at least 4 hours prior to randomization). Exclusion Criteria: - Patient unwilling or unable to provide consent - Multiple pregnancy - Known azithromycin (or other macrolide) allergy - Vaginal delivery - Elective or scheduled cesarean prior to labor or membrane rupture. - Azithromycin, erythromycin or other macrolide antibiotic use within 7 days of enrollment. - Clinical chorioamnionitis or any other active bacterial infection (e.g. pyelonephritis, pneumonia, abscess) at time of randomization. - Patient is unable or unlikely to follow-up after delivery (e.g. no prenatal care or a non-resident patient) - Fetal demise or major congenital anomaly - Significant liver disease defined as known cirrhosis or elevated transaminases of at least 3-fold upper limit of normal - Significant renal disease defined as serum creatinine known to be >2.0 mg/dl or on dialysis. - Active congestive heart failure (EF<45%) or pulmonary edema - Active diarrhea at time of delivery - Any patient with significant electrolyte abnormalities such as hypokalemia or hypocalcemia - Any patient with structural heart disease or arrhythmias, or taking any medications known to prolong the QT interval - Patient currently being treated with efavirenz, nelfinavir or fluconazole |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Mission Hospital | Ashville | North Carolina |
United States | University of Alabama at Birmingham | Birmingham | Alabama |
United States | University of North Carolina | Chapel Hill | North Carolina |
United States | University of Texas Medical Branch | Galveston | Texas |
United States | University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston | Houston | Texas |
United States | University of Mississippi Medical Center | Jackson | Mississippi |
United States | Ochsner Clinic Foundation | New Orleans | Louisiana |
United States | Columbia University | New York | New York |
United States | University of Utah | Salt Lake City | Utah |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Alan Tita | Columbia University, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), Mission Hospital, Ochsner Health System, The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, University of Mississippi Medical Center, University of North Carolina, University of Texas, University of Utah |
United States,
Andrews WW, Hauth JC, Cliver SP, Savage K, Goldenberg RL. Randomized clinical trial of extended spectrum antibiotic prophylaxis with coverage for Ureaplasma urealyticum to reduce post-cesarean delivery endometritis. Obstet Gynecol. 2003 Jun;101(6):1183-9. — View Citation
Tita AT, Hauth JC, Grimes A, Owen J, Stamm AM, Andrews WW. Decreasing incidence of postcesarean endometritis with extended-spectrum antibiotic prophylaxis. Obstet Gynecol. 2008 Jan;111(1):51-6. doi: 10.1097/01.AOG.0000295868.43851.39. — View Citation
Tita AT, Rouse DJ, Blackwell S, Saade GR, Spong CY, Andrews WW. Emerging concepts in antibiotic prophylaxis for cesarean delivery: a systematic review. Obstet Gynecol. 2009 Mar;113(3):675-82. doi: 10.1097/AOG.0b013e318197c3b6. Review. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Neonatal morbidities including death, RDS, BPD, PVL, suspected or proven sepsis, NEC, IVH and systemic inflammatory response syndrome | Up to 3 months after birth | Yes | |
Other | NICU admission | Up to 3 months after birth | Yes | |
Other | Neonatal readmission | Up to 3 months after birth | Yes | |
Other | Maternal fever | Up to 6 weeks after delivery | No | |
Other | Maternal postpartum readmission or unscheduled visit | Up to 6 weeks after delivery | No | |
Other | Maternal postpartum antibiotic use | Up to 6 weeks after delivery | No | |
Other | Composite Maternal serious adverse events | Up to 6 weeks after delivery | Yes | |
Other | Composite neonatal serious adverse events | Up to 3 months after birth | Yes | |
Other | Infant pyloric stenosis | Any diagnosis of pyloric stenosis based on clinical presentation and radiological and/or surgical confirmation | up to 3 months after birth | Yes |
Other | Post-cesarean infection by chorioamnionic colonization with ureaplasmas | Does the impact of extended regimen vary by the presence or absence of ureaplasmas at randomization? | Up to 6 weeks after delivery | No |
Other | Effect modifiers | Does the impact of extended prophylaxis vary by specific factors including obesity, wound size, duration from administration to incision | Up to 6 weeks after delivery | No |
Primary | Composite of endometritis and/or wound infection and/or other post-cesarean infections (occurring within 6 weeks of delivery) | Up to 6 weeks after delivery | No | |
Secondary | Individual post-cesarean infections: Endometritis, wound infection (including necrotizing fascitis), other infections including abscess, septic thrombosis, pneumonia, pyelonephritis and breast infection | Up 6 weeks after delivery | No |
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