Surgical site infections (SSI) are costly complications that may cause significant morbidity and increase the cost of care, particularly in colorectal surgery. Microbial sealants (MS) are a new class of wound barriers aimed at decreasing SSI, however there is only evidence of benefit in clean Class 1 procedures. Based on its success in Class 1 procedures, we hypothesized that a microbial sealant could reduce the rate of SSI by half for clean contaminated colorectal procedures (Class 2).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
100
Los Angeles County/USC Medical Center
Los Angeles, California, United States
Incidence of SSI with and without microbial sealant.
Determine the rate of SSI when microbial sealant (InteguSEAL© Kimberly-Clark) is used compared to control (no microbial sealant).
Time frame: 15 Months
Subgroup incidence of SSI with and without microbial sealant
Compare SSI for open vs. laparoscopy colectomy, age, BMI, diabetes and morbidity (ASA class), hospital readmission, reoperation and wound dehiscence with and without microbial sealant.
Time frame: 15 months
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