Study Results
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Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
40 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-06-01
2020-12-31
Brief Summary
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In 2011 Gaspari et al. published a landmark article on the use of USGNA for skin abscesses. In this randomized controlled trial, USGNA and I\&D had failure rates of 74% and 20% respectively, which makes USGNA an unappealing treatment option. However, the study had several methodological issues that likely biased the results in favor of I\&D, including the following: 1) aspiration was performed with an 18-gauge needle which is often too small to aspirate thick purulence (or pus); 2) failure to fully aspirate all abscess contents was a priori defined as treatment failure rather than strictly clinical outcomes; 3) the abscess aspiration procedure was not standardized; and 4) post-intervention oral antibiotic therapy was not used on all patients.
The main hypothesis is that a modified protocol of the Gaspari et al. USGNA study to address these flaws will demonstrate a failure of USGNA comparable to I\&D for the treatment of uncomplicated skin abscesses. First, the study will standardize the use of larger 14-gauge needle on all USGNAs. Second, USGNA intervention failure need not be defined as the inability to completely aspirate all abscess cavity contents under ultrasound guidance. Previous studies have demonstrated clinical success with USGNA of skin abscesses without applying the rigid failure criteria chosen by Gaspari et al. There is only one study in the literature to suggest that there is no correlation between a small quantity of residual abscess contents post-USGNA and ultimate clinical failure, however, there are no studies which specifically address this clinical question. In this study, initial treatment failure of USGNA will be defined as the inability to aspirate any purulent material. Third, treatment outcomes in this study will be determined by clinical resolution of abscess at the study endpoint of 7-10 days, which is a well-established timeline for anticipated abscess healing and endpoint clinical follow-up. Fourth, ultrasound fellowship-trained emergency physicians will perform USGNA in standardized fashion on all enrolled patients. Lastly, post-intervention oral antibiotic with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) coverage will be provided and compliance closely monitored throughout the study.
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Detailed Description
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Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Surgical I&D Procedure
The abscess cavity will be evaluated thoroughly with ultrasonography. The site will be prepared and draped. The skin surface will be infiltrated with local anesthetic with a 25-gauge needle. The treating clinician may provide ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia for procedural analgesia at their discretion. Incision of the skin surface with a number 11-blade scalpel will be performed over the largest area of infection; the incision will be extended into the abscess cavity. A blunt instrument will then be used to break up internal loculations if present. Repeated instrumentation through the initial incision or extension of the original incision will be performed if needed. Lastly, iodoform packing will be inserted through the incision into the cavity. The decision to send the abscess contents for microbiological culture and susceptibility analysis will be at the discretion of the treating clinician.
Incision and Drainage (I&D)
The current standard procedure to drain an abscess of purulent material.
Ultrasound-guided Needle Aspiration Procedure
The abscess cavity will be evaluated thoroughly with US. The site will be prepared and draped. The skin surface and anticipated needle track will be infiltrated with local anesthetic with a 25g needle. The treating clinician may provide ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia for procedural analgesia at their discretion. Under direct US-guided visualization, a 14g 2in steel needle attached to a 40mL syringe will be advanced into the abscess cavity with manual negative pressure. The needle tract will be extended obliquely 2-3 cm between the skin and abscess to prevent fistulization. Purulent material will be aspirated until no further purulence can be aspirated. Multiple aspiration attempts on the initial visit will be permitted to maximally drain the abscess cavity. Additionally, irrigation of the abscess cavity with sterile saline will be permitted to break up internal loculations if present, as has reported previously for trunk and breast abscesses.
Ultrasound-guided Needle Aspiration Procedure
The intervention under investigation utilizes an ultrasound-guided needle to less invasively drain an abscess.
Interventions
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Ultrasound-guided Needle Aspiration Procedure
The intervention under investigation utilizes an ultrasound-guided needle to less invasively drain an abscess.
Incision and Drainage (I&D)
The current standard procedure to drain an abscess of purulent material.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Abscesses must be verified by physical examination and bedside ultrasound.
3. Patients with clinical history of diabetes mellitus and previous diagnosis of MRSA will be included.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Patient or legal guardian is unable to give consent.
3. Patients with no means of clinical follow-up will be excluded.
4. Complicated abscesses, defined as an abscess with associated sepsis, lymphangitis, or osteomyelitis, requiring intravenous antibiotic therapy, requiring hospital admission, previous surgical drainage at site of abscess, overlying skin lesion/fistula/ulceration with the exception of cellulitis, perforated or actively draining abscess, duration of symptoms \> 5 days,1,28 and/or multiple concurrent abscesses that can be clinically regarded as chronic in nature will be excluded.
4\) Abscess locations which will be excluded are dental, peritonsillar, anorectal, genital/inguinal, axillary if suspicion for chronic hidradenitis suppurativa, or pilonidal/intragluteal at the base of the coccyx.
5\) Abscesses greater in size than 3x3x3 cm in any dimension will be excluded. \[It has been suggested extensively in the surgical literature that an abscess diameter \>3 cm should have surgical/catheter-drainage as the initial management instead of needle aspiration\]2,5,15,19,27,33 \[It has been reported that abscesses \>3 cm in size have increased failure rates\]15 6) Abscess depth is greater than maximal needle length. 7) Patients with immunosuppression from following clinical conditions will be excluded: HIV, cancer on active chemotherapy.
8\) Patients with active history of IV drug use will be excluded.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Wayne State University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Robert Ehrman
Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine
Principal Investigators
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Robert Ehrman, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Wayne State University
Central Contacts
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References
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Blaivas M. Ultrasound-guided breast abscess aspiration in a difficult case. Acad Emerg Med. 2001 Apr;8(4):398-401. doi: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.2001.tb02122.x.
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Herzon FS. Needle aspiration of nonperitonsillar head and neck abscesses. A six-year experience. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1988 Nov;114(11):1312-4. doi: 10.1001/archotol.1988.01860230106035.
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May L, Harter K, Yadav K, Strauss R, Abualenain J, Keim A, Schmitz G. Practice patterns and management strategies for purulent skin and soft-tissue infections in an urban academic ED. Am J Emerg Med. 2012 Feb;30(2):302-10. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2010.11.033. Epub 2011 Jan 28.
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Other Identifiers
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1804001385
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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