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Clinical Trials/NCT03075813
NCT03075813
Completed
Not Applicable

Early Recognition and Response to Increases in Surgical Site Infections Using Optimized Statistical Process Control Charts

Duke University1 site in 1 country29 target enrollmentMarch 6, 2017

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Infection Control
Sponsor
Duke University
Enrollment
29
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Differences in rates of SSI.
Status
Completed
Last Updated
6 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of this quality improvement study is to measure the effectiveness of surveillance using optimized statistical process control (SPC) methods and feedback on rates of surgical site infection (SSI) compared to traditional surveillance and feedback.

The primary objective is to determine if hospital clusters randomized to receive feedback from optimized SPC surveillance methods collectively have lower rates of SSI compared to hospital clusters randomized to receiving feedback from traditional surveillance methods. Secondary objectives are 1) to estimate and compare the number of signals identified using optimized SPC methods and traditional surveillance methods; 2) to estimate and compare the time and effort required to investigate signals generated using optimized SPC methods and traditional surveillance methods; and 3) to estimate the number and proportion of false-positive signals identified using optimized SPC methods and traditional surveillance methods.

The Early 2RIS study will be a prospective, multicenter cluster randomized controlled trial using stepped wedge design. The active component of the quality improvement study will be performed in 29 DICON hospitals over three years, from March 2017 through February 2020. Clusters randomized to intervention will receive feedback on increasing rates of SSI identified through optimized SPC methods. This intervention is expected to decrease the subsequent rate of SSIs by closing the feedback loop on SSI outcomes.

Participating study hospitals will all be members of DICON, a network of 43 community hospitals in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, and Virginia that provides community hospitals access to consultative services from infection prevention experts, data analyses and benchmarking, and educational materials designed by faculty from Duke. This study is considered part of routine quality improvement measures and a part of previously established agreements between DICON and the community hospitals. Data flow and communication are outlined in detail in approved protocols determined to be exempt research by the DUHS IRB. Briefly, existing clinical data are extracted from participating hospitals' electronic medical record into discrete files according to DICON specifications. Then a de-identification process removes direct patient identifiers into a limited dataset.

The majority of data collection will occur through methods already developed and utilized by study hospitals. In brief, each hospital routinely submits limited datasets to the DICON Surgical Surveillance Database, including the following variables: hospital, type of procedure, patient identifier, date of procedure, age, sex, surgeon identifier, start/stop times, ASA score, wound class, risk index, SSI (Yes/No), date of infection, type of SSI, location at diagnosis and organism. No identifiable patient or surgeon data are transmitted to the DICON Surgical Database. Data definitions and data collection methods are standardized across DICON hospitals. Following signal adjudication, additional data will be collected in a REDCap database to document actions and rationale.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 6, 2017
End Date
February 29, 2020
Last Updated
6 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • All patients who undergo one of 13 targeted procedures in 29 DICON study hospitals will be eligible for inclusion. The 13 targeted procedures include coronary artery bypass graft, cardiac valve replacement, colon surgery, herniorrhapy, knee arthroplasty, hip arthroplasty, Cesarean section, abdominal hysterectomy, vaginal hysterectomy, spinal fusion, laminectomy, carotid endarterectomy, and peripheral venous bypass. These procedures were selected because they are frequently performed in community hospitals and/or are associated with particularly adverse outcomes if complicated by SSI. Eligible procedures will be categorized by procedure type at each hospital using ICD9 codes published by the NHSN, per routine DICON activities. Six clusters were constructed from these procedures to ensure that surgeons who perform similar types of procedures were grouped together to limit potential bias. These clusters are labeled as Spine, GI, OB/GYN, Ortho, Vascular, and Cardiac. These clusters are the units for randomization and analysis.

Exclusion Criteria

  • DICON hospitals that did not submit a letter of support for participating in the study will be excluded. Patients not undergoing one of these 13 procedure types at the 29 study hospitals will be excluded from the analysis.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Differences in rates of SSI.

Time Frame: SSIs can be diagnosed up 30 to 90 days following the procedure, depending on the type of procedure

SSI rate will be calculated as number of SSI/100 procedures per month SSIs will be defined using standard NHSN definitions DICON personnel train local infection preventionists about how to use and interpret SSI definitions. Thus, standard definitions and methods are used at all study hospitals. Cluster-level risk adjustment will be performed using median surgical volume and median NHSN Risk Index (an operation- and patient-specific risk score that predicts SSI) per cluster.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Time to completion of investigation(36 months (entire study period))
  • Description of and difference in number and type of signals(36 months (entire study period))
  • Difference in number of outbreaks identified(36 months (entire study period))
  • Total number and differences in proportion of signals that led to investigations(36 months (entire study period))
  • Timing of signals(36 months (entire study period))
  • Strength and type of signals(36 months (entire study period))
  • Difference in number of investigations of increased rates of SSI(36 months (entire study period))
  • Proportion of SSIs determined to be potentially preventable(diagnosed up 30 to 90 days following the procedure, depending on the type of procedure)
  • Time required to investigate signals(36 months (entire study period))

Study Sites (1)

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