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CompletedNCT04296643

Medical Masks vs N95 Respirators for COVID-19

Medical Masks Versus N95 Respirators to Prevent 2019 Novel Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) in Healthcare Workers: A Randomized Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,009 (actual)
Sponsor
McMaster University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

A randomized controlled trial in which health care workers will be randomized to either medical masks or N95 respirators when providing care to patients with COVID-19.

Detailed description

A randomized controlled trial in which health care workers will be randomized to either medical masks or N95 respirators when providing medical care to patients with COVID-19. This multi-centre randomized controlled trial will assess whether medical masks are non-inferior to N95 respirators when health care workers provide care involving non-aerosol generating procedures. Health care workers will be randomized to either use of a medical mask or to a fit-tested N95 respirator when providing care for patients with febrile respiratory illness. Health care workers randomly assigned to the N95 respirator group will be instructed to use a fit-tested National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health-approved N95 respirator when providing routine care to patients with COVID-19 or suspected COVID-19. Participants will use the type of device they were allocated to, either a medical mask or an N95 respirator, for 10 weeks, however, health care workers can also use the N95 respirator at any time based on a point-of-care risk assessment. Universal masking is the policy implemented at each study site. Extended and re-use of N95 respirators will be permitted if the local situation requires it. The primary outcome is laboratory confirmed RT-PCR COVID-19 among participants. A nasopharyngeal swab will be obtained if any one of the following symptoms or signs is present: fever (≥38 C), cough, or shortness of breath, or if 2 of the following are present: fatigue, myalgia, headache, dizziness, expectoration, sore throat, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, runny nose, altered taste or smell, conjunctivitis, or painful swallowing. Participants that receive a COVID-19 vaccine after enrollment with efficacy of \> 50% for the circulating strain will continue to be followed until 2 weeks after the first dose of the vaccine. All other participants will be followed for 10 weeks. Self-reporting of hand hygiene and the use of external monitors, where feasible, will be used to collect basic hand hygiene data. The sample size is 1,010 participants. This will allow 90% power at an alpha (one sided) of 0.05 and to account for participants who may not have completed 10 weeks because of COVID-19 mRNA vaccination. Changes made to the protocol prior to May 4, 2020, which was prior to the start of enrollment: * Eligibility criteria expanded from nurses who provide direct patient care to health care workers that provide direct patient care. * Allowed extended and re-use of N95 respirators if the local situation required it. * Added self-reporting of hand hygiene and the use of external monitors if feasible. * Reduced the duration of follow up from 12 weeks to 10 weeks Changes made on or after May 4, 2020: * Expanded the criteria for the requirement of swabs to detect COVID-19 by adding runny nose, altered taste or smell, and conjunctivitis and also asked for a swab for fever, cough, or shortness of breath alone OR for two of the previously listed symptoms or signs (May 19, 2020). * Added previously known COVID infection as an exclusion (October, 30, 2020). * Added receipt of a COVID-19 vaccine with efficacy of \> 50% as an exclusion (October 30, 2020). * Allowed those participants that received a COVID-19 vaccine after enrollment with efficacy of \> 50% for the circulating strain to continue to be followed until 2 weeks after the first dose of the vaccine (December 17, 2020). * Increased the sample size to 1,010 participants to allow 90% power at an alpha (one sided) of 0.05 and to account for participants who may not have completed 10 weeks because of COVID-19 mRNA vaccination (July 26, 2021). * Added wording to capture implementation since May 4th, 2020, "Where the policy of the healthcare setting has been universal use of a facemask, that is wearing a facemask at all times when in the hospital, then the facemask participants were randomized to will be used." (December 27, 2021)

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEMedical MaskMedical Mask (known also as Surgical Mask)
DEVICEN95 respiratorN95 respirator

Timeline

Start date
2020-03-01
Primary completion
2022-06-01
Completion
2022-12-08
First posted
2020-03-05
Last updated
2023-01-12

Locations

15 sites across 4 countries: Canada, Egypt, Israel, Pakistan

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04296643. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.