Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02260479

Preheated Skin Disinfection vs Room-temperature on Bacterial Colonization During Pace Device Implantation

The Effect of Preheated Skin Disinfection in Relation to Room-temperature Skin Disinfection on Bacterial Colonization During Pace Device Implantation: a Randomized Controlled Non-inferiority Trial.

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2 / Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
220 (actual)
Sponsor
Örebro University, Sweden · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The primary aim was to investigate if preheated skin disinfection with Chlorhexidine in alcohol was non-inferior compared to room-temperature regarding skin colonization as well as bacterial colonization in wound, skin temperature and patients experiences.

Detailed description

Patients were randomly assigned to preheated (36ᵒC, intervention) skin disinfection (Chlorhexidine 5mg/ml in 70% alcohol) or room temperature (20ᵒC, control) skin disinfection (Chlorhexidine 5mg/ml in 70% alcohol). Patient´s enrollment to operation was made by an external controller who had no closer knowledge of present study. All patients were asked to participate in that sequence they arrived to the OR department when study nurse was present. Assignment took place directly after patients consent. Patients were stratified into gender and thereafter randomly allocated to preheated or control group, based on a computer-generated randomization list made by an independent statistician. Patients showered, scrubbing their whole body and hair twice with 4% chlorhexidine soap Descutan® (Fresenius Kabi AB, Uppsala, Sweden) prior to surgery. and patients were prepared after skin disinfection with a microbial sealant. Most patients were elective and arrived the morning of surgery to the hospital. Following standard procedures, intravenously administered antibiotic prophylaxis (cloxacillin 2 g) was administrated at the ward 30 minutes before surgery. In the OR the patients wore a disposable cap and were positioned on the operating table. The OR temperature were 19°C with upward displacement ventilation. Sterile disposable surgical gowns (Samutprakarn, Thailand/Mölnlycke Health Care AB, Göteborg, Sweden) and indicator gloves (Selangor, Malaysia/Mölnlycke Health Care AB Göteborg, Sweden) were worn by the surgeon and OR nurse. Other OR staff (n=2) wore cotton scrubs, short-sleeved tunic shirt with cuffs at the arms, and trousers with cuffs at the ankles. They also wore disposable helmets and facemasks. Both groups were given skin disinfection during 2 minutes with the same amount of solution (Chlorhexidine 5mg/ml in 70% alcohol). The skin disinfection (Chlorhexidine 5mg/ml, in alcohol) was stored in room-temperature and was measured to keep 20ᵒC while the preheated was stored in a warming cupboard who kept 36ᵒC. The participants were disinfected from cheek down over sternum according to routine procedures. Sterile material for draping and clothing were for single use only. Cultures were obtained at four occasions using a nylon flocked swab (Copan ESwab, Italia SpA): before skin disinfection on skin surface; after skin disinfection on skin surface; directly after the incision, at completion of the incision, and finally before start of closing sutures. Swab cultures were rubbed for 15 seconds slightly moist with saline on skin surface (incision site). Swabs taken in the wound were rubbed along the inside of the incision for 15 seconds with a dry swab. Surgery was performed by two cardiologists. Cultures were kept cold until arrival at the Department of Laboratory medicine, Clinical Microbiology. Cultures were taken care of and analyzed according to a specific protocol designed especially for the study.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREPreheatedSkin disinfection solution is preheated in a warming cupboard

Timeline

Start date
2013-01-01
Primary completion
2014-11-01
Completion
2014-11-01
First posted
2014-10-09
Last updated
2015-01-28

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02260479. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.