Cargando…

Standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for Wound Healing in Surgery for Trauma (WHIST)

INTRODUCTION: Patients with closed high-energy injuries associated with major trauma have surprisingly high rates of surgical site infection in incisions created during fracture fixation. One factor that may reduce the risk of surgical site infection is the type of dressing applied over the closed s...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Achten, Juul, Vadher, Karan, Bruce, Julie, Nanchahal, Jagdeep, Spoors, Louise, Masters, James P, Dutton, Susan, Madan, Jason, Costa, Matthew L
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6009622/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29880575
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022115
_version_ 1783333428057341952
author Achten, Juul
Vadher, Karan
Bruce, Julie
Nanchahal, Jagdeep
Spoors, Louise
Masters, James P
Dutton, Susan
Madan, Jason
Costa, Matthew L
author_facet Achten, Juul
Vadher, Karan
Bruce, Julie
Nanchahal, Jagdeep
Spoors, Louise
Masters, James P
Dutton, Susan
Madan, Jason
Costa, Matthew L
author_sort Achten, Juul
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Patients with closed high-energy injuries associated with major trauma have surprisingly high rates of surgical site infection in incisions created during fracture fixation. One factor that may reduce the risk of surgical site infection is the type of dressing applied over the closed surgical incision. In this multicentre randomised clinical trial, negative-pressure wound therapy will be compared with standard dressings with outcomes of deep infection, quality of life, pain and disability. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Adult patients presenting to hospital within 72 hours of sustaining major trauma, requiring a surgical incision to treat a fractured lower limb, are eligible for inclusion. Randomisation, stratified by trial centre, open/closed fracture at presentation and Injury Severity Score (ISS) ≤15 versus ISS ≥16 will be administered via a secure web-based service using minimisation. The random allocation will be to either standard wound management or negative-pressure wound therapy. Trial participants will usually have clinical follow-up at the local fracture clinic for a minimum of 6 months, as per standard National Health Service practice. Diagnosis of deep infection will be recorded at 30 days. Functional, pain and quality of life outcome data will be collected using the Disability Rating Index, Douleur Neuropathique Questionnaire and Euroqol - 5 Dimension - 5 level (EQ-5D-5L) questionnaires at 3 months and 6 months postinjury. Further data will be captured on resource use and any late postoperative complications. Longer term outcomes will be assessed annually for 5 years and reported separately. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: National Research Ethics Committee approved this study on 16 February 2016 16/WM/0006. The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment monograph and a manuscript to a peer-reviewed journal will be submitted on completion of this trial. The results of this trial will inform clinical practice on the clinical and cost-effectiveness of the treatment of this injury. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN12702354; Pre-results.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6009622
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-60096222018-06-25 Standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for Wound Healing in Surgery for Trauma (WHIST) Achten, Juul Vadher, Karan Bruce, Julie Nanchahal, Jagdeep Spoors, Louise Masters, James P Dutton, Susan Madan, Jason Costa, Matthew L BMJ Open Surgery INTRODUCTION: Patients with closed high-energy injuries associated with major trauma have surprisingly high rates of surgical site infection in incisions created during fracture fixation. One factor that may reduce the risk of surgical site infection is the type of dressing applied over the closed surgical incision. In this multicentre randomised clinical trial, negative-pressure wound therapy will be compared with standard dressings with outcomes of deep infection, quality of life, pain and disability. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Adult patients presenting to hospital within 72 hours of sustaining major trauma, requiring a surgical incision to treat a fractured lower limb, are eligible for inclusion. Randomisation, stratified by trial centre, open/closed fracture at presentation and Injury Severity Score (ISS) ≤15 versus ISS ≥16 will be administered via a secure web-based service using minimisation. The random allocation will be to either standard wound management or negative-pressure wound therapy. Trial participants will usually have clinical follow-up at the local fracture clinic for a minimum of 6 months, as per standard National Health Service practice. Diagnosis of deep infection will be recorded at 30 days. Functional, pain and quality of life outcome data will be collected using the Disability Rating Index, Douleur Neuropathique Questionnaire and Euroqol - 5 Dimension - 5 level (EQ-5D-5L) questionnaires at 3 months and 6 months postinjury. Further data will be captured on resource use and any late postoperative complications. Longer term outcomes will be assessed annually for 5 years and reported separately. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: National Research Ethics Committee approved this study on 16 February 2016 16/WM/0006. The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment monograph and a manuscript to a peer-reviewed journal will be submitted on completion of this trial. The results of this trial will inform clinical practice on the clinical and cost-effectiveness of the treatment of this injury. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN12702354; Pre-results. BMJ Publishing Group 2018-06-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6009622/ /pubmed/29880575 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022115 Text en © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted. This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
spellingShingle Surgery
Achten, Juul
Vadher, Karan
Bruce, Julie
Nanchahal, Jagdeep
Spoors, Louise
Masters, James P
Dutton, Susan
Madan, Jason
Costa, Matthew L
Standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for Wound Healing in Surgery for Trauma (WHIST)
title Standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for Wound Healing in Surgery for Trauma (WHIST)
title_full Standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for Wound Healing in Surgery for Trauma (WHIST)
title_fullStr Standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for Wound Healing in Surgery for Trauma (WHIST)
title_full_unstemmed Standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for Wound Healing in Surgery for Trauma (WHIST)
title_short Standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for Wound Healing in Surgery for Trauma (WHIST)
title_sort standard wound management versus negative-pressure wound therapy in the treatment of adult patients having surgical incisions for major trauma to the lower limb—a two-arm parallel group superiority randomised controlled trial: protocol for wound healing in surgery for trauma (whist)
topic Surgery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6009622/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29880575
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-022115
work_keys_str_mv AT achtenjuul standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist
AT vadherkaran standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist
AT brucejulie standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist
AT nanchahaljagdeep standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist
AT spoorslouise standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist
AT mastersjamesp standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist
AT duttonsusan standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist
AT madanjason standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist
AT costamatthewl standardwoundmanagementversusnegativepressurewoundtherapyinthetreatmentofadultpatientshavingsurgicalincisionsformajortraumatothelowerlimbatwoarmparallelgroupsuperiorityrandomisedcontrolledtrialprotocolforwoundhealinginsurgeryfortraumawhist