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Use of Negative Pressure Wound Therapy in High Risk Surgical Closed Incisions

21 mars 2017 uppdaterad av: Daniel Dante Yeh, Massachusetts General Hospital

A Prospective Observational Study of the Use of Negative Pressure Wound in High Risk Surgical Closed Incisions.

The purpose of this study is to investigate the use of Negative Pressure Wound Therapy in high risk surgical wounds to evaluate the rate of surgical site infections (SSIs).

Hypothesis:

Historically, the average rates of infective complications in surgical wounds types are 7.7% in clean wounds, 15% for contaminated and 35-40% for dirty wounds. The application of Prevena ™ Incision Management System (Kinetic Concepts Inc, San Antonio, TX) is expected to reduce these rates by 50%.

Studieöversikt

Status

Avslutad

Intervention / Behandling

Detaljerad beskrivning

Wound infections continue to be a common and costly problem after surgery. Surgical site infections (SSIs) are the second most common type of health care - associated infections (HAI), occurring in 2% to 5% of patients undergoing surgery in the United States. This percentage corresponds to approximately 300,000 to 500,000 surgical site infections (SSIs) estimated to occur each year.

Most SSIs that do not involve implants are diagnosed within 3 weeks post--operatively . SSIs lead to increased hospital stay, cost, and risk of death. The cost attributable to SSI range from $3,000 to $29,000 per SSI per patient depending on the type of operation; thus, the total annual cost approximately reaches the $10 billions. On other analyses documented nearly 1 million additional inpatient-days and $1.6 billion in excess costs , as well as up to twice the costs of a patient without SSI. Moreover, SSIs increase mortality risk by 2 to 11 fold 11, while the 77% of deaths in patients with SSI are attributed directly to the SSIs. Several organizations have put forth guidelines for definition and recommendations to decrease their incidence. Attempts have been made to stratify patients into various categories on the basis of the type of surgical procedure and risk factors the patients have, including diabetes, malnutrition, and hypoxemia. These systems have been used to develop criteria for the prevention of wound infection.

Appropriate timing and dosing of antibiotics, type of skin preparation, temperature of the patient in the operating room, blood oxygen level of the patient during surgery, and management of blood glucose levels all have been standardized in an attempt to decrease wound infection rates . In addition, debridement of all tissue that may contribute to wound infection, particularly ischemic skin and subcutaneous tissue, is standard surgical procedure. Standardization has led to a small decrease in incidence but has not led to a significant reduction in the overall rate. One reason for this is the multifactorial nature of SSI development. Factors regarding patients and pre-operative status, operative procedures and intra-operative events, as well as postoperative course, all need to be addressed, and there is not a complete understanding of their range and impact. What is known is that at the time of wound closure, one needs a minimal number of bacteria in the wound, and the wound itself must be reasonably well perfused and oxygenated. After surgery, wound perfusion and oxygenation are evaluated by clinical appearance. If the wound does not appear ischemic, it is assumed that perfusion and oxygenation are adequate. Unfortunately, this has never been quantified. Negative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT) has been used to speed the healing of open wounds.

How this occurs is not completely understood, but increased generation of granulation tissue at the margins of the open wound implies increased generation of blood vessels and substances needed to promote wound healing.

The theory of negative pressure is the stimulation of wound healing on the basis of improved perfusion to the wound. This has been seen in open wounds and has recently been applied to closed surgical wounds thought to be at high risk for infection. Negative-pressure wound therapy was also applied to closed wounds in an attempt to improve wound perfusion and oxygenation, which in theory would eliminate these two variables from the wound infection equation.

Techniques - Procedures Complete closure of the abdominal wall and skin follows the completion of the index surgical procedure. Closed suction drains may be used at the time of skin closure in any patient who requires skin flap elevation to attain skin closure. Skin closure will be accomplished with dermal sutures and / or staples. Wound coverage will be done with the NPWT Prevena ™ Incision Management System (Kinetic Concepts Inc, San Antonio, TX). The application of the NPWT will be done as per manufacturer's instructions of use. The application of continuous negative pressure will be applied at 125 mm Hg.Antibiotics will be given to all patients. The post-operative use of antibiotics in the clear contaminated and contaminated cases will be 24-hour of prophylactic administration. The post-operative use of antibiotics for the dirty (infected) cases will be of therapeutic administration, as clinically indicated. In infected patients, cultures will be taken at the time of the index procedure, and the antibiotic treatment will be targeted to the culture results. Wounds will be assessed every 48 hours by dressing changes, and also at the time of final dressing removal and at 2 and 4 weeks after surgery. The dressing removal will take place at discharge OR at 5 - 7 post-operative days OR if clinically indicated, whichever comes first. Post-discharge follow-up The patients will be followed-up per routine at the surgical clinic. At 2 and 4 weeks after the date of the operation a formal evaluation will take place. Both evaluations must be in person at the surgical clinic.

Studietyp

Interventionell

Inskrivning (Faktisk)

10

Fas

  • Fas 4

Kontakter och platser

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Studieorter

    • Massachusetts
      • Boston, Massachusetts, Förenta staterna, 02114
        • Massachusetts General Hospital

Deltagandekriterier

Forskare letar efter personer som passar en viss beskrivning, så kallade behörighetskriterier. Några exempel på dessa kriterier är en persons allmänna hälsotillstånd eller tidigare behandlingar.

Urvalskriterier

Åldrar som är berättigade till studier

18 år till 95 år (Vuxen, Äldre vuxen)

Tar emot friska volontärer

Nej

Kön som är behöriga för studier

Allt

Beskrivning

Inclusion Criteria:

  • All five of the following criteria must be present for enrollment into the study:

    1. Signed written informed consent must be provided by the patient or by patient's legally acceptable representative, if patient unable to consent.
    2. Age > 18 years
    3. Abdominal operation entering the peritoneal cavity under general anesthesia for colostomy or ileostomy reversal or enterocutaneous fistula excision
    4. Clean - contaminated OR contaminated OR dirty wound (as defined by Wound Infection Surveillance) OR use of skin flaps for skin closure.
    5. Complete closure of the surgical wound including the skin.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • 1) Known allergic reaction at the wound dressing parts of the Prevena ™ Incision Management System.

(Included but not limited to: sensitivity to silver, allergic or hypersensitivity reaction to acrylic adhesives).

2) Inability to close the abdominal wall at the index procedure. 3) Inability to close the skin at the index procedure. 4) Patients under 18 years old. 5) Pregnant women test

Studieplan

Det här avsnittet ger detaljer om studieplanen, inklusive hur studien är utformad och vad studien mäter.

Hur är studien utformad?

Designdetaljer

  • Primärt syfte: Behandling
  • Tilldelning: N/A
  • Interventionsmodell: Enskild gruppuppgift
  • Maskning: Ingen (Open Label)

Vapen och interventioner

Deltagargrupp / Arm
Intervention / Behandling
Experimentell: Negative Pressure Wound Therapy

After the completion of the operation, incisional skin closure was performed using sutures or staples and the wound was then covered with the Negative Pressure Wound therapy Prevena Incision Management System (Kinetic Concepts Inc) as per the manufacturer's instructions of use. Continuous negative pressure was applied at 125 mm Hg.

For inpatients, wounds were assessed every 48 hours by inspection and palpation. The dressing was not routinely removed, but the surrounding skin was assessed for cellulitis. The NPWT dressing was removed between post-operative day 5 and 7

Vad mäter studien?

Primära resultatmått

Resultatmått
Åtgärdsbeskrivning
Tidsram
Number of Participants With Surgical Site Infections Within 1 Month (4 Weeks ) From Index Operation
Tidsram: 30 days
Incidence of SSIs within 1 month (4 weeks) from the index operation. SSI is defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Healthcare Surveillance Network
30 days

Sekundära resultatmått

Resultatmått
Åtgärdsbeskrivning
Tidsram
Composite Secondary Outcomes of Non-infectious Abdominal Wound Complications, Damage to the Skin Caused by the Dressing, Need to End the Treatment Prior to Discharge or Prior to 5-7 Post-operative Days, and Need for Reapplication of the System.
Tidsram: 4 weeks

Secondary (composite) outcomes:

  1. other non infectious abdominal wound complications,
  2. damage to the skin caused by the dressing
  3. need to end the treatment prior the discharge OR prior to 5 -7 post- operative days.
  4. need for re-application of the system for any reason
4 weeks

Samarbetspartners och utredare

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Studieavstämningsdatum

Dessa datum spårar framstegen för inlämningar av studieposter och sammanfattande resultat till ClinicalTrials.gov. Studieposter och rapporterade resultat granskas av National Library of Medicine (NLM) för att säkerställa att de uppfyller specifika kvalitetskontrollstandarder innan de publiceras på den offentliga webbplatsen.

Studera stora datum

Studiestart

1 maj 2014

Primärt slutförande (Faktisk)

1 september 2016

Avslutad studie (Faktisk)

1 september 2016

Studieregistreringsdatum

Först inskickad

8 maj 2014

Först inskickad som uppfyllde QC-kriterierna

10 maj 2014

Första postat (Uppskatta)

13 maj 2014

Uppdateringar av studier

Senaste uppdatering publicerad (Faktisk)

18 april 2017

Senaste inskickade uppdateringen som uppfyllde QC-kriterierna

21 mars 2017

Senast verifierad

1 mars 2017

Mer information

Termer relaterade till denna studie

Ytterligare relevanta MeSH-villkor

Andra studie-ID-nummer

  • 2013P002484

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Kliniska prövningar på High Risk Abdominal Wounds

Kliniska prövningar på Negative Pressure treatment

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