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Standard abdominal wound edge protection with surgical dressings vs coverage with a sterile circular polyethylene drape for prevention of surgical site infections (BaFO): Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

  • André L. Mihaljevic
  • , Christoph W. Michalski
  • , Mert Erkan
  • , Carolin Reiser-Erkan
  • , Carsten Jäger
  • , Tibor Schuster
  • , Christoph Schuhmacher
  • , Jörg Kleeff
  • , Helmut Friess
  • Technical University of Munich
  • CHIR-Net

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Postoperative surgical site infections cause substantial morbidity, prolonged hospitalization, costs and even mortality and remain one of the most frequent surgical complications. Approximately 14% to 30% of all patients undergoing elective open abdominal surgery are affected and methods to reduce surgical site infection rates warrant further investigation and evaluation in randomized controlled trials.Methods/design: To investigate whether the application of a circular plastic wound protector reduces the rate of surgical site infections in general and visceral surgical patients that undergo midline or transverse laparotomy by 50%. BaFO is a randomized, controlled, patient-blinded and observer-blinded multicenter clinical trial with two parallel surgical groups. The primary outcome measure will be the rate of surgical site infections within 45 days postoperative assessed according to the definition of the Center for Disease Control. Statistical analysis of the primary endpoint will be based on the intention-to-treat population. The global level of significance is set at 5% (2 sided) and sample size (n = 258 per group) is determined to assure a power of 80% with a planned interim analysis for the primary endpoint after the inclusion of 340 patients.Discussion: The BaFO trial will explore if the rate of surgical site infections can be reduced by a single, simple, inexpensive intervention in patients undergoing open elective abdominal surgery. Its pragmatic design guarantees high external validity and clinical relevance.Trial registration: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT01181206. Date of registration: 11 August 2010; date of first patient randomized: 8 September 2010.

Original languageEnglish
Article number57
JournalTrials
Volume13
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 May 2012

Keywords

  • Abdominal dressing
  • Abdominal surgery
  • Randomized trial
  • Surgical site infection
  • Wound edge protector
  • Wound infection

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