Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01179022

Incidence of Bacteremia Following Argon Plasma Coagulation in Patients With Endobronchial Lesions

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
46 (actual)
Sponsor
Meir Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Incidence of Bacteremia Following Argon Plasma Coagulation in Patients with Endobronchial Lesions

Detailed description

Bacteremia is a well-recognized invasive medical condition. In most cases, it is a transient phenomenon without clinical consequences. In certain patients, such as those with structural cardiac abnormalities, it may lead to the development of infectious endocarditis. According to an American Heart Association statement, routine endocarditis prophylaxis is indicated prior to invasive procedures with relatively high bacteremia rates, such as dental care,certain types of catheterization and rigid bronchoscopy \[1\].Fibreoptic bronchoscopy, with or without biopsy is not included in this list due to a very low bacteremia rate \[1\].This even applies to particularly high risk patients with prosthetic valve or previous endocarditis. Yigla et al. assessed the incidence of bacteremia following bronchoscopy and found 6.5% of bacteremia rate. (2) Recently, Steinfort et al. assessed the bacteremia rate following endobronchial ultrasound and found 7% of bacteremia rate following the procedure. All bacterial isolates were typical oropharyngeal commensal organisms. The transbronchial needle aspiration washing culture was positive in 35% of the patients. However, none of the bacteremic patients had clinical features suggestive of infection and no complications were seen among the cohort. (3) No data are available, however about the bacteremic rate following interventional bronchoscopy for endobronchial obstruction and advance lung carcinoma. In these cases, palliative setting of alleviating central airway obstruction, laser resection, electrocautery, argon plasma coagulation and stenting are techniques that can provide immediate relief. Argon plasma coagulation (APC) is uses ionize argon gas jet flow to conduct electrons allowing a noncontact mode of treatment (lightning effect). (4, 5) APC has been popular in gastrointestinal endoscopy for superficial coagulation of large mucosal surfaces. The argon gas quite flexibly flows around bends and corners. Coagulated tissue has a higher resistance that automatically drives the argon gas flow away to nearby untreated tissue. An immediate effect really can be seen during electrocautery treatment, which corresponds well with the histological effect of coagulative necrosis. We therefore conduct a prospective study to assess the bacteremic rate following APC in patients with endobronchial involvement.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2010-10-01
Primary completion
2012-10-01
Completion
2012-10-01
First posted
2010-08-10
Last updated
2013-03-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Israel

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01179022. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.