Surgical Site Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized Controlled Trial to Evaluate the Optimal Timing of Surgical Antimicrobial Prophylaxis
Surgical site infections (SSI) are the most frequent hospital acquired infections in
patients who underwent surgery. With regards to the increasing financial restraint in
patient care, the socio-economic burden of SSI in the public health sector and its
prevention gains in importance.
The prophylactic application of antibiotics (surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis, SAP) prior
to the skin incision significantly reduces the risk of SSI, but the correct time point of
drug administration remains unclear. Most studies recommend application of SAP directly
prior to skin incision. Other studies, however, suggest that this is too late and more time
between administration of the SAP and skin incision is necessary for optimal SSI prevention.
A large cohort study in Switzerland concluded that SAP should be applied between 74 and 30
minutes prior to skin incision.
Due to the obvious importance of this controversy, we want to answer this question with a
clinical study (randomized controlled trial, RCT) at the University Hospital of Basel and
the Cantonal Hospital of Aarau. We plan to investigate two administration strategies
according to the timing of the SAP. Strategy A will consist of SAP application in the
anesthetic room located in front of the actual operating theatre, where the patient gets
anesthesia. Therefore, the application of SAP will take place early, approximately between
75 and 30 minutes prior to skin incision. In strategy B we will apply SAP in the operating
theatre, which on average occurs later (approximately within the last 30 minutes before skin
incision).
We test the hypothesis that strategy A is more effective in preventing SSI than strategy B.
We will include a total of 5000 patients in abdominal, vascular and trauma surgery (2500 at
each study site and 2500 per study group). All patients will be followed in the hospital for
SSI occurrence. Additionally, all patients will be interviewed by telephone after hospital
discharge at a defined follow-up period of 30 days (1 year if an implant is in place, such
as hip endoprosthesis or meshes). We expect this study to be completed within approximately
3 years.
Additionally, the association between the following pre-defined variables and the occurence
of SSI, mortality, morbidity and length of hospital stay (LOS) will be investigated:
- laparoscopy
- tutorial assistance during operation
- obesity (Body Mass Index, BMI)
- preoperative Virtual Reality (VR) training
- Adherence to Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) concept
- smoking status
- perioperative blood glucose levels
- preoperative levels of HbA1c
- intensified insulin resistance as measured by Homeostasis Model Assessment (HOMA) and
quantitative insulin-sensitivity check index (QUICKI)
- type of diabetes (IDDM vs. NIDDM)
- intraoperative Hypothermia (body core temperature)
- Lack of adherence to the principles of asepsis during surgery
- surgical experience
- patients age
- Malnutrition, measured by Hypalbuminaemia
- emergency operations
- immunosuppression and steroids
- Predictive value of Procalcitonin
- American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification
- intraoperative blood transfusion
- preoperative wound class
Amendments:
The following changes were made to the study protocol according to amendments approved by
the local ethics committee:
- As of April 22nd, 2013, or the 222. patient randomized at the University Hospital
Basel, the time the SAP infusion STARTED was recorded instead of the time that it
ENDED. The decision to change this important parameter was taken in order to make
results of this trial more comparable to those of other published studies.
- In the original study protocol it was planned to provide each randomized patient with a
patient's diary to record signs of SSI. This was abandoned for limited benefit and in
order to minimize patients' time and effort.
- Patients who undergo combined surgery (by one of the participating surgical specialties
plus by a non participating specialty) shall not be included in this trial as outcomes
(SSI) could be difficult to correlate to one or another part of surgery. This had not
been specified as an exclusion criterion in the original study protocol.
- Patients' information sheets and informed consents in one of the languages other than
German were only approved by the local ethics committees by May 15th, 2013.
- As per ethics committees regulations, patients can only be included in more than one
clinical trials under specific circumstances. Therefore only a limited percentage of
patients that are already included in other studies can still be included for this
trial. However, overall, this only excludes a very limited number of potentially
includable patients.
The following additional amendments were authorized by the ethics committees on August 9th,
2014:
- Version 4 of the patients' information and the written consent form. In these new
versions, patients are specifically asked for permission to review their general
practitioners' notes concerning potential SSI, for planned follow up as well as in case of
readmission to hospital. This is specified in the study protocol, but had not been
specifically mentioned in the patients' information and consent forms. This change is also
intended to significantly decrease the number of patients lost to follow up as it proved
difficult to contact some patients by telephone.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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