Prophylatic Effect Preoperative Antibiotics With Mechanical Bowel Preparation in SSIs: A Propensity Analysis
NCT ID: NCT04258098
Last Updated: 2020-02-06
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
806 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2011-01-01
2019-05-12
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Colonic bacterial florae are considered to be the major cause of SSIs after elective colorectal procedures, but the most effective means of decreasing this bacterial load remains under debate. Pre-operative mechanical bowel preparation (MBP) was first utilized by surgeons, as it can theoretically remove stool content and associated bacterial load within the bowel and surgical field, thus reducing risk of SSIs. More recently, as antibiotics have come to be widely utilized, the pre-operative administration of un-absorbed oral antibiotics (OA) in combination with MBP was widely conducted.
Multiple trials have been performed to explore the best bowel preparation strategies, but their results remain controversial. Since 2005, several RCTs and meta-analyses have demonstrated MBP alone was not associated with a reduced incidence of SSIs related to patients that did not undergo MBP, whereas MBP patients exhibited paradoxical increases in postoperative ileus, anastomotic leakage, and other complications. Recently, the merit of OA and MBP has been re-discovered in several related retrospective studies which demonstrated a significant decrease in the rate of SSIs.However, as information in these trials was exacted from national databases without any detailed matching between patient groups, the existence of bias in these trials may affect the validity of their results. Furthermore, none of these studies assessed the relative prophylactic effects of the novel MBP mode in right or left-side colorectal surgery.
Conditions
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
RETROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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OA+MBP group
Either polyethylene glycol or magnesium sulphate was adopted as laxative one day before surgery. Clyster was conducted on surgery morning. Streptomycin 1g plus metronidazole 0.2g was prescribed 3 times a day for 3 days before surgery in the OA+MBP group patients.
Oral antibiotics ( Streptomycin ,metronidazole )
Either polyethylene glycol or magnesium sulphate was adopted as laxative one day before surgery. Clyster was conducted on surgery morning. Streptomycin 1g plus metronidazole 0.2g was prescribed 3 times a day for 3 days before surgery in the OA+MBP group patients.
MBP group
Either polyethylene glycol or magnesium sulphate was adopted as laxative one day before surgery. Clyster was conducted on surgery morning. No oral antibiotics was administered to the patients.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Oral antibiotics ( Streptomycin ,metronidazole )
Either polyethylene glycol or magnesium sulphate was adopted as laxative one day before surgery. Clyster was conducted on surgery morning. Streptomycin 1g plus metronidazole 0.2g was prescribed 3 times a day for 3 days before surgery in the OA+MBP group patients.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Patient baseline characteristics and operative information were available;
3. MBP (mechanical bowel preparation) was performed before surgery, with or without OA (oral antibiotics).
Exclusion Criteria
2. MBP was not conducted due to ileus or patient refusal;
3. Enough data was not available;
4. Colorectal resection was performed due to benign disease;
5. The procedure was accompanied by other procedures that had the potential to contaminate the incision, such as cholecystectomy or appendectomy;
6. Patients underwent neoadjuvant radiotherapy before surgery.
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Third Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-Sen University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Hongbo Wei
Prof.
References
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Lei P, Ruan Y, Yang X, Wu J, Hou Y, Wei H, Chen T. Preoperative mechanical bowel preparation with oral antibiotics reduces surgical site infection after elective colorectal surgery for malignancies: results of a propensity matching analysis. World J Surg Oncol. 2020 Feb 11;18(1):35. doi: 10.1186/s12957-020-1804-4.
Other Identifiers
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2018023
Identifier Type: OTHER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
OAMBP-02
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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