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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT07106437

GREEN CATHeter Lab Study

Assessing Waste and Environmental Impact in Catheterization Laboratories: Results From the GREEN CATHeter Lab Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
40 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study involves the prospective quantification and classification of waste produced during interventional cardiology procedures. For each included case, the total waste generated will be measured in kilograms immediately after completion of the procedure. Waste will be physically sorted and recorded by category in accordance with four predefined waste types: (i) paper and cardboard, (ii) regular waste (i.e., municipal solid waste or general trash), (iii) regulated medical waste (requiring specialized incineration including sharpsafe), and (iv) recyclable plastic. Based on two models ("Basel Model" and "Standard Model"), the study will perform scenario-based calculations to compare the environmental and economic impact of both strategies.

Detailed description

Interventional cardiology procedures generate substantial amounts of waste, not only medical waste but also large volumes of packaging materials such as paper, cardboard, and plastic. In many hospitals, all procedural waste, regardless of type, is disposed of as medical waste. This practice results in high disposal costs and increased environmental burden, as medical waste requires specialized, energy-intensive incineration and leads to considerable CO₂ emissions. At the University Hospital Basel, waste is systematically separated into categories, enabling structured evaluation of waste streams and environmental impact. Despite growing interest in sustainable healthcare, there is currently a lack of data on the quantity and composition of waste generated per specific procedure type in interventional cardiology. This creates an unmet need to quantify not only how much waste is produced but also to identify which components may be recyclable. this study is to quantify the total amount and type of waste generated during interventional cardiovascular procedures and to contextualize this waste in relation to the average daily waste production of both a Swiss resident and a hospital inpatient. By linking procedural waste generation to familiar population-based benchmarks, This study aims to provide a comprehensible measure of the environmental footprint of each procedure type. Waste will be recorded in kilograms and categorized into four predefined waste streams (paper/cardboard, regular municipal waste, regulated medical waste, and recyclable plastic). To ensure representative and comparable results, at least ten cases for each of the following procedure groups will be included: (i) elective coronary angiography with (ia) or without (ib) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), (ii) complex PCI procedures, such as chronic total occlusions (CTO), complex high-risk indicated procedures (CHIP), or interventions performed in patients with cardiogenic shock requiring mechanical support (e.g., Impella), and (iii) structural heart interventions, including TAVI and (iv) TEER of the mitral or tricuspid valves (MitraClip or TriClip). To assess the broader ecological and financial implications of current waste management practices, two comparative disposal models will be applied. The first, referred to as the "Basel Model", reflects the current institutional practice at the University Hospital Basel, where procedural waste is systematically separated into the four aforementioned categories at the point of care. The second, the "Standard Model", simulates a hypothetical but common practice in many hospitals, in which all waste generated during interventional procedures is disposed of as regulated medical waste, without separation.Based on these two models, the study will perform scenario-based calculations to compare the environmental and economic impact of both strategies.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHER"Basel Model": Measure of total waste after completion of the procedureFor each included case, the total waste generated will be measured in kilograms immediately after completion of the procedure and physically recorded by category in accordance with four predefined waste types: (i) paper and cardboard, (ii) regular waste (i.e., municipal solid waste or general trash), (iii) regulated medical waste (requiring specialized incineration including sharpsafe), and (iv) recyclable plastic
OTHER"Standard Model": Measure of total waste after completion of the procedureSimulation of a hypothetical but common practice in many hospitals, in which all waste generated during interventional procedures is disposed of as regulated medical waste, without separation.

Timeline

Start date
2025-05-01
Primary completion
2025-09-03
Completion
2025-09-03
First posted
2025-08-06
Last updated
2026-03-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07106437. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.